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The New Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women
 9781474436298

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THE NEW BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY OF  SCOTTISH WOMEN

This dictionary is dedicated to the memory of our co-editor and friend Sue Innes (1948–2005), who gave to it all the enthusiasm, dedication and flair she brought to everything in her life, and who was still working on it, and inspiring others, to the very end. As an epigraph for the Dictionary, Sue chose these lines by Mary Brooksbank: Politicians and rulers Are richly rewarded, But in one woman’s life Is our history recorded.

THE NEW BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY OF SCOTTISH WOMEN Editors Elizabeth Ewan, Rose Pipes, Jane Rendall, Siân Reynolds

Edinburgh University Press is one of the leading university presses in the UK. We publish academic books and j­ournals in our selected subject areas across the humanities and social sciences, combining cutting-edge scholarship with high ­editorial and production values to produce academic works of lasting importance. For more information visit our website: edinburghuniversitypress.com © editorial matter and organisation Elizabeth Ewan, Sue Innes, Rose Pipes, Jane Rendall and Siân Reynolds, 2018 © the entries their several authors, 2018 Edinburgh University Press Ltd The Tun – Holyrood Road 12 (2f ) Jackson’s Entry Edinburgh EH8 8PJ Typeset in 9.5/11 Adobe Garamond by Servis Filmsetting Ltd, Stockport, Cheshire, and printed and bound in Great Britain A CIP record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN 978 1 4744 3627 4 (hardback) ISBN 978 1 4744 3628 1 (paperback) ISBN 978 1 4744 3629 8 (webready PDF) ISBN 978 1 4744 3630 4 (epub) The right of the contributors to be identified as authors of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 and the Copyright and Related Rights Regulations 2003 (SI No. 2498). Published with the support of the University of Edinburgh Scholarly Publishing Initiatives Fund.

Contents Acknowledgements for The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women (2006)  vi Acknowledgements for The New Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women (2018)  viii Advisers to the Project (2006)  ix Contributors x Abbreviations xviii Readers’ Guide  xxvii New Entries  xxix Joint and Co-subjects  xxxi Preface to The New Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women xxxv Introduction to The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women (2006)  xxxviii The New Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women  1 Thematic Index  470

Acknowledgements The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women (2006) This Dictionary is in every sense a collective work. It arose out of a joint initiative: from the steering committee of the Scottish Women’s History Network (re-named Women’s History Scotland in 2005) and from Edinburgh University Press. The editors thank all the members of the Network for their help, encouragement and many authorial contributions, and John Davey of EUP for commissioning the project and seeing it through to within a few months of completion. We also wish to express heartfelt gratitude to Moira Burgess and Jane Rendall, who acted as associate editors to the project during the final months. They wrote and edited a number of entries that were originally commissioned by or allocated to our late colleague Sue Innes, whose illness prevented her from completing the work. Our greatest debt is, of course, to our contributors. This is their book. Thanks are due to those copyright holders who gave their permission for us to reproduce textual material and illustrations. The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2004) was published before this work, and we are grateful to Robert Faber of Oxford University Press for their co-operation relating to modified entries written by authors who contributed to both publications. A number of people were invited to act as editorial advisers to the initial project and throughout its gestation. We have greatly valued their expertise and advice on particular historical periods and fields of interest. Their names are listed on page ix. The editors also consulted other experts on various topics, several of whom deserve special mention: Christopher Dingwall (on gardeners), Lou Donovan (on science), John MacInnes (on Gaelic society), Lindy Moore (on education), Alison Robertson (on the churches). Many archivists and librarians were of great help to us, in particular Gillian Whitley Roberts of the National Register of Archives for Scotland, Alison Fraser (Orkney), Brian Smith (Shetland), Lesley Richmond (University of Glasgow), Moira Stewart and David Catto (Aberdeenshire Libraries). The staff of the National Library of Scotland, as always, offered much help. Deborah Hunter, Julie

Lawson and other colleagues on the staff of the National Galleries of Scotland provided valuable assistance with picture research, as did Dorothy Kidd of the National Museums of Scotland. Central to the management of the project was the electronic database which was specially designed for the project by Frances Allen. Her creative expertise, goodwill and considerable patience have been of inexpressible value. The professional skills of all the following people have also been central to the project: Kath Davies evaluated and copy-edited the entries, and went well beyond her brief in refining the text and eliminating inaccuracies; Mary Henderson researched large numbers of obituaries; Flora Johnston joined the team to research and write entries where no secondary sources existed; Anne Lynas did much essential genealogical research, tracking down details from often incomplete information, as well as editing some entries. Of EUP staff, Carol Macdonald, Anna Somerville and Mareike Weber were of great help in dealing with author contracts, and James Dale with editorial issues. Roda Morrison took over from John Davey to lend support and assistance in the final months, and Jackie Jones backed the project throughout. This publication would not have been possible without funding for research, management, administration and editorial assistance. We are extremely grateful to those listed below for their generous contributions. We are also indebted to: Margaret Ford, Ray Perman and Eileen Yeo for their help in seeking funding; Eileen Yeo (Director of the Centre in Gender Studies, University of Strathclyde) for administering the grants received from the Strathmartine Trust; and Ann Kettle, treasurer of Women’s History Scotland, for keeping the project accounts. Anonymous private donors Centre for Scottish Studies, the University of Stirling College of Arts, University of Guelph, Canada Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada vi

Acknowledgements

University of Strathclyde Centre in Gender Studies The Strathmartine Trust, St Andrews Women’s History Scotland Women’s Fund for Scotland (set up in 2002 to raise the profile and obtain funds for work with women. www.womensfundscotland.org)

The publishers are also grateful to the Scottish Arts Council for awarding a grant towards the cost of production.

Finally, we would like to acknowledge Allotment No. 85, Inverleith Park, for providing much-needed mental and physical nourishment to sustain all the editors during the final stages of the project. The same, and much more, was provided throughout by Jo Clifford; Rebecca, Katie and Jean Innes; Peter France; and Kris Inwood.

The Scottish Executive Development Department, Equality Unit

Women’s History Network

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Acknowledgements The New Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women (2018) For the preparation of this extended and revised version of The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women, the editors owe their greatest debt to the contributors. Others for whom special thanks are due are: Alison McCall, for essential genealogical and other research; Frances Allen for re-designing the database; Aileen Christianson, Amy Hayes, Rachel Davis, Kate Louise Mathis, and Dorothy McMillan for advice and help with revisions to a number of existing entries; Marian Toledo Candelaria for identifying new and updated Oxford Dictionary of National Biography entries; John Watson at EUP for proposing this new edition; and Jen Daly, Adela Rauchova, David Lonergan, Eddie Clark and other staff at EUP for steering it through to ­publication. We are also grateful to those contributors who supplied their own photographs free of charge,

and to all other photo suppliers for granting us ­permission to reproduce their images. Funding was essential for photo fees and other expenses, and we are again indebted to the Strathmartine Trust and to Women’s History Scotland for their financial support.

viii

Advisers to the Project (2006) †

Helen Clark Elizabeth Cumming Helen Dingwall Sarah Dunnigan Julian Goodare Eleanor Gordon Marjory Harper Grant Jarvie Jacqueline Jenkinson † Jean Jones Jane McDermid Dorothy McMillan Maureen M. Meikle Stana Nenadic Lesley Orr John W. Purser Jane Rendall Adrienne Scullion

Edinburgh City Museums and Galleries University of Glasgow University of Stirling University of Edinburgh University of Edinburgh University of Glasgow University of Aberdeen University of Stirling University of Stirling Edinburgh University of Southampton University of Glasgow Leeds Trinity University University of Edinburgh University of Edinburgh Sabhal Mòr Ostaig, Isle of Skye University of York University of Glasgow

(† indicates deceased)

ix

Contributors Every effort has been made to trace the authors of the 2006 edition of The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women to ensure that their details are up to date. († indicates deceased) LCA RPA RA PAC JA CAA MA DA CA PDA

Lynn Abrams Rob Adams Rosy Addison Patricia Adkins Chiti Johanna Alberti Ceri Allen Margaret Allen David Alston Carol Anderson Peter Anderson

SGA LA † BA BEA NCB MB-J KB ICMB

Sheila G. Anderson Liz Arthur Bernard Aspinwall Beryl Attaway Nina Baker Malcolm Bangor-Jones Katie Barclay Ishbel Barnes

PB JRB KJWB HEB TB JDB MB † BB MgtB KBB MEB MPB SB VB LB CMB LAMB KHB CGB IB RB YGB

Patricia Barton Jamie Reid Baxter Kenneth Baxter Helen Beale Tom Begg Jean Beggs Maureen Bell Betty Bennett Margaret Bennett Kay Blackwell Mary Blance Marion Blythman Steve Boardman Valentina Bold Liz Bondi Catherine Booth Louise Boreham Katherine Bradley Callum Brown Ian Brown Rhona Brown Yvonne Galloway Brown

University of Glasgow Edinburgh Edinburgh Fondazione Adkins Chiti: Donna in Musica, Rome The Open University Pembroke, Canada University of Adelaide, Australia Cromarty Falkirk Retired Deputy Keeper, National Archives of Scotland, Edinburgh Girlguiding Scotland Archives The Glasgow School of Art University of Strathclyde Tamworth, Staffordshire Glasgow Sutherland University of Adelaide Formerly Managing Director of the Scottish Archive Network University of Strathclyde Edinburgh University of Dundee Independent researcher Kippen, Stirlingshire University of Edinburgh Glasgow Washington DC, USA The Royal Conservatoire of Scotland, Glasgow Glasgow Lerwick, Shetland Edinburgh University of Edinburgh University of Edinburgh University of Edinburgh Edinburgh Kinghorn, Fife Formerly Oxford Brookes University University of Glasgow Kingston University, London University of Glasgow Dornoch x

Contributors

JBr FB † MTB CVB MARB CB JB MFB PFB LMCB † ALRC CNTC DC KMC ACa CCa JJC HC JSC ABC AKC † HEC JC RC KJC CC ACo EJC MC KC NMC AC CEC MEC BEC ECr VEC JLC MAMC VC EC KP JWD KMD JEAD BDe GD JD BD ED SMD CHD HMD

Jenny Brownrigg Frank Bruce Mary Brück Cynthia Burek Moira Burgess Catriona Burness James Burnett Margaret Ferguson Burns Paul Burton Lucinda Byatt Angus Calder Lady Cecil Cameron Donald Campbell Kath Campbell Audrey Canning Claire Carolan Jennifer Carter Hugh Cheape Jane Cheape Aileen Christianson Anna Clark Helen Clark Jennifer Clement Rob Close Ken Cockburn Christine Collette Anne Cooke Edward J. Cowan Mairi Cowan Krista Cowman Nicola Cowmeadow Adriana Craciun Carol Craig Maggie Craig Barbara Crawford Elizabeth Crawford Viviene Cree Jenny Cronin Morag Cross Victoria Crowe Elizabeth Cumming Kimm Perkins Curran Julie Davidson Kath Davies Jane Dawson Brian Dempsey Gordon DesBrisay Judith Devaliant Beth Dickson Eric Dickson Sheila Dillon Christopher Dingwall Helen Dingwall

The Glasgow School of Art Edinburgh Penicuik University of Chester Glasgow Inverness Banchory, Aberdeenshire WEA Lothian Women’s Forum Milton of Campsie Edinburgh Edinburgh London Edinburgh University of Edinburgh Glasgow Aberdeen Women’s Alliance Aberdeen Edinburgh Edinburgh University of Edinburgh University of Minnesota, USA Edinburgh City Museums and Galleries Mexico Ayr Edinburgh France University of Cambridge University of Glasgow University of Toronto, Canada University of Lincoln Perth University of Nottingham Glasgow Huntly, Aberdeenshire University of St Andrews London University of Edinburgh Glasgow Kirkintilloch West Linton Edinburgh University of Glasgow Edinburgh Edinburgh University of Edinburgh University of Dundee University of Saskatchewan, Canada Auckland, New Zealand St Aloysius College, Glasgow The Muriel Spark Society London Blairgowrie University of Stirling xi

Contributors

RED DD RD † SMDoug FD CD SD BCD RE GE KTE WE ME EJE EE CLE MF JFe † BF JAF DF JF LF TF JEF AF

Rebecca Emerson Dobash Duncan Donald Rona Dougall Sheila Douglas Fiona Downie Carol Dunbar Sarah Dunnigan Britta C. Dwyer Rosalind Elder Gemma Elliott Kirsten Elliott Walter Elliot Margaret Elphinstone Elizabeth Evans Elizabeth Ewan Christine Lodge Ewing Maureen Farrell Janet Fenton Bill Findlay Joanne Findon David Finkelstein Janine Fitzpatrick Linda Fleming Tommy Fowler James Fraser Anne Frater

AG ESG JLG JCG SJG

Alix Gaffney Ellen Galford Jane George Jill Gerber Sarah Jane Gibbon

JGil PBG CG KG JG EG MJG LG ICG EJG RG † CBMG PG JHa LAH MAH DJH MHH JBH MDH

Jim Gilchrist Pamela Giles Catherine Gillies Katharine Glover Julian Goodare Eleanor Gordon Mary Gordon Laurence Gourievidis Isabelle Gow Eric Graham Ruth Grant Chris Gregory Pat Grimshaw Janet Hadley Williams Lesley A. Hall Mark Hall Douglas Hamilton Mathew Hammond June Hannam Marjory Harper

Edinburgh National Trust for Scotland University of Glasgow Scone, Perthshire University of Melbourne, Australia The Pier Arts Centre, Stromness, Orkney University of Edinburgh Cambridge Courtenay, British Columbia, Canada University of Glasgow University of Cambridge Selkirk, Borders Galloway Gerrards Cross, Buckinghamshire University of Guelph, Canada Ayrshire University of Glasgow Scotland’s for Peace, Edinburgh Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh Trent University, Canada University of Edinburgh Glasgow University of Glasgow Glasgow University of Guelph, Canada Lews Castle College, University of the Highlands and Islands, Stornoway, Lewis Edinburgh Edinburgh Edinburgh Gerber Fine Art, Glasgow Orkney College, University of the Highlands and Islands Edinburgh Saskatoon, Canada Ergadia Museums and Heritage, Oban Dunedin, New Zealand University of Edinburgh University of Glasgow Edinburgh University of Blaise Pascal, France Lochmaben, Dumfries and Galloway University of Edinburgh Lumsden, Aberdeenshire Edinburgh University of Melbourne, Australia Australian National University The Wellcome Library, London Perth Museum & Art Gallery, Scotland University of Winchester King’s College, London University of the West of England University of Aberdeen xii

Contributors

RJH EMH EAH JTH JVH MvH AH LFH IMH JMH † AH LRH SH AHe LH FAH ECH HH GH JH SHH IH † SI NJI LJ LAJ GJ JLMJ FJ AEJ HEK JK SKK AK † HK LK AEK WWJK NK EL CLEL LLin MDL LL NL RL ML AML KL EBL CJM ATM WBM

Rosemary Hartill Elspeth Haston Elspeth Haston Jim Healy Janice Helland Marij van Helmond Ann Henderson Lizanne Henderson Mary Henderson Joy Hendry Anne Hepburn Lorna Hepburn Sarah Hepworth Amanda Herbert Leslie Hills Liza Hollingshead Emily Holloway Falconer Helen Hood Gwyneth Hoyle Jean Hubbard Shannon Hunter Hurtado Iain Hutchison Sue Innes Nicola Ireland Laurie Jacklin Louise Jackson Grant Jarvie Jacqueline Jenkinson Flora Johnston Ann Jones Helen Kay Joyce Kay S. Karly Kehoe Alison Kerr Henny King Lillian King Andrea Knox William Knox Natasha Kuran Evelyn Laidlaw Cherry Lewis Lesley Lindsay Magnus Linklater Leon Litvack Nancy Loucks Rhonda Lowe Maria Luddy Alison Lumsden Kirsty Lusk Emily Lyle C. Joan McAlpine Alison McCall Bill McCarthy

Edinburgh Royal Botanic Garden, Edinburgh Milltimber, Aberdeenshire Perth Queen’s University, Canada Dunoon Formerly STUC University of Glasgow Dundee Edinburgh Edinburgh National Trust for Scotland The University of Glasgow Guy’s & St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust Edinburgh Findhorn Foundation, Forres, Moray Edmonton, Alberta, Canada Edinburgh Peterborough, Ontario, Canada Kirkcaldy Edinburgh University of Strathclyde Edinburgh Formerly National Galleries of Scotland, Edinburgh University of Waterloo, Canada University of Edinburgh University of Edinburgh University of Stirling Edinburgh Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh Edinburgh Edinburgh St Mary’s University, Halifax, Canada Glasgow Dundee Kelty Northumbria University University of St Andrews Ottawa, Canada Edinburgh University of Bristol University of Dundee Edinburgh Queen’s University, Belfast Independent criminologist, Lanark Kirkwall, Orkney University of Warwick University of Aberdeen University of Glasgow University of Edinburgh Glasgow Kintore, Aberdeen Penn State DuBois, USA xiii

Contributors

RMcC MPM JMcD RAM JBIM KJM MM IMacD LMcD YM KAM IMcG JMacI MMaci DGM AMcI AMcK AM PMacK HMcL JRM SGM DCM MMacL DAMcM JMcM DLM

Rosalind McClean Margery Palmer McCulloch Jane McDermid Andrew McDonald Jan McDonald Joan MacDonald Murdo MacDonald Ian MacDougall Lesley McDowell Yvonne McEwen Katharine Macfarlane Ian McGowan John MacInnes Maggie Macinnes D. Gordon Macintyre Arthur McIvor Anne McKim Alison Mackinnon Pam MacKinnon Hugh V. McLachlan John Ross MacLean Shona MacLean Daniel MacLeod Morag MacLeod Dorothy McMillan Joyce McMillan David Lee McMullen

EM JMcR SM PM RLM RKM LM KLM IEM ABM MMM DMi JHMM CMi VM BM HM SAM LRM RJM A M-L BEM RM DM SSM

Eilidh Macrae Jennifer McRobert Shona Main Paul Maloney Rebecca Marr Rosalind K. Marshall Lauren Martin Kate Louise Mathis Irene Maver Alasdair B. Mearns Maureen Meikle Deidre Michie Joyce Miller Colin Milton Valerie Miner Bob Mitchell Henry Mitchell Scott Moir Lindy Moore Bob Morris Alison Morrison-Low Barbara Mortimer Richard Mowe David Mullan Stephen Mullen

University of Waikato, New Zealand University of Glasgow University of Southampton Brock University, Canada University of Glasgow Isle of Lewis Argyll and Bute Council, Lochgilphead Edinburgh Glasgow Formerly University of Edinburgh University of Glasgow University of Stirling Formerly School of Scottish Studies, University of Edinburgh Ayr Edinburgh University of Strathclyde University of Waikato, New Zealand University of South Australia Edinburgh Glasgow Caledonian University Edinburgh Highland, Scotland St Paul’s College, University of Manitoba, Canada Isle of Scalpay, Harris University of Glasgow Edinburgh University of North Carolina Charlotte, USA/University of Aberdeen University of the West of Scotland University of Lethbridge, Canada University of Stirling Queen’s University Belfast Stromness, Orkney Edinburgh Long Lake, Minnesota, USA University of Glasgow University of Glasgow Muie East, Rogart, Sutherland Leeds Trinity University Aberdeen Cockenzie/Port Seton Edinburgh Stanford University, USA Elie, Fife University of Edinburgh Cape Breton University, Canada Holywell, Wales University of Edinburgh National Museums of Scotland, Edinburgh Edinburgh Edinburgh Formerly Cape Breton University, Canada University of Glasgow xiv

Contributors

CM KM IM SEM JM GMN SN CJN BN JMN GN AO’H SO RO LO CAO DP GP AP JSP HP SWP SP MP GPe RP JEP † CGP † BP JP † NR MSR DR ER IAR JMR LR PMR NHR JR SR MR PER WR JRR TSR JCR KBER ECS MHBS † JS NRS PS

Candy Munro Kate Murphy Isobel Murray Susan Murray Jacqueline Muscott Gwyneth Nair Stana Nenadic Cynthia Neville Brenda Niall Joan Morrison Noble Glenda Norquay Angela O’Hagan Sybil Oldfield Richard Oram Lesley Orr Carol A. Osborne Dorothy Page Geoffrey Palmer Adele Patrick Juliette Pattinson Helen Payne Sarah Pedersen Susan Pedersen Michael Penman Guy Peploe Ray Perman Jane Potter Carolyn Proctor Bob Purdie John Purser Neil Rafeek Mary Stenhouse Ramsay Deborah Reid Eileen Reid Irene A. Reid Jean Reid Lindsay Reid Maureen Reid Norman Reid Jane Rendall Siân Reynolds Margaret Ritchie Pamela Ritchie William Ritchie Julia Rayer Rolfe Tracey S. Rosenberg Jane Routh Ken Roxburgh Elizabeth C. Sanderson Margaret H. B. Sanderson Jutta Schwarzkopf Nicola Scott Priscilla Scott

Glasgow Bournemouth University University of Aberdeen Rochester, USA Edinburgh University of Paisley University of Edinburgh Dalhousie University, Canada Monash University, Australia Victoria, British Columbia, Canada Liverpool John Moores University Glasgow Caledonian University Lewes, formerly University of Sussex University of Stirling University of Edinburgh Leeds Beckett University, UK Formerly University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh Glasgow Women’s Library University of Kent University of Adelaide, Australia Robert Gordon University Columbia University, New York University of Stirling The Scottish Gallery, Edinburgh Edinburgh Oxford Brookes University Ballintoum, Perthshire Ruskin College, Oxford Elgol, Skye University of Strathclyde Bothwell, Tasmania University of Edinburgh Glasgow University of Stirling Glasgow Fife Girlguiding Scotland Archives University of St Andrews University of York University of Stirling Edinburgh TannerRitchie Publishing, Canada Formerly Roslin Institute, Edinburgh Edinburgh University of Edinburgh Lancaster Samford University, USA Linlithgow Linlithgow University of Hanover, Germany University of Stirling University of Edinburgh xv

Contributors

AMcMS AS MS MES ALS MBS DLS FBS KES BS EMS GRS JJS LS MKS JJS SS JoS HS DAS FS LAMS DUS NS DS NEAT DAHBT ST MT SCT ALT SLT JT † AT MV ARW RBW OW ERW † AW CHW DPW FEW C-MW FRW JRW DMW JW LW AWP MW KW JJW

Anne M. Scriven Adrienne Scullion Mary Seenan Megan Selva Anne Lynas Shah Maureen Sier Deborah Simonton Frances Singh Bobbie Smith Brian Smith Eunice Smith Graham Smith Jeremy Smith Lis Smith Megan Smitley Jim Smyth Stephen Snobelen Joanna Soden Hilary Stace David Steel Fiona Steinkamp Laura Stewart Domhnall Uilleam Stiùbhart Nicola Sturgeon Deborah A. Symonds Naomi Tarrant David A. H. B. Taylor Simon Taylor Margaret Tennant Susannah Thompson Amy Thomson Suzanne Trill Jill Turnbull Alison Twaddle Mary Verschuur Anne Wade Randi Bjørshol Wærdahl Oliver Wainwright Rosemary Wake Agnes Walker Constance Walker David Pat Walker Fran Wasoff Claire-Marie Watson Fiona Watson Richard Watson Diane Watters James Weldon Les Wheeler Annette White-Parks Morag Williams Karina Williamson Jason Wilson

Paisley University of Glasgow Ayrshire Washington DC, USA Edinburgh Glasgow Formerly University of Southern Denmark Hostos Community College (CUNY), New York City Edinburgh Shetland Archives, Lerwick Edinburgh University of Sheffield University of Glasgow Fife London University of Stirling University of King’s College, Halifax, Canada Formerly Royal Scottish Academy of Art & Architecture Wellington, New Zealand Lancaster University University of Edinburgh University of York Sabhal Mòr Ostaig, University of the Highlands and Islands Bute House, Edinburgh Drake University, USA Edinburgh National Trust, London University of Glasgow Massey University, New Zealand The Glasgow School of Art Aberdeen University of Edinburgh Edinburgh Church of Scotland Omaha, USA Moving Image Archive, Glasgow Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim The Guardian, London Edinburgh Glasgow Carleton College, Minnesota, USA Edinburgh University of Edinburgh Dundee Aberdeen University of Durham Historic Environment Scotland Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada Elphinstone Institute, University of Aberdeen University of Wisconsin, USA Dumfries University of Edinburgh University of Guelph, Canada xvi

Contributors

PBW CW AJW EY LY FY HY GZ

Penelope Wilson Charles Withers Anne Worrall Eileen Yeo Louise Yeoman Fay Young Hannah Young Georgianna Ziegler

Murray Edwards College, University of Cambridge University of Edinburgh Keele University Brighton BBC Scotland, Edinburgh Edinburgh University College London Folger Shakespeare Library, emerita, Washington DC, USA

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Abbreviations

Organisations, institutions, services etc. referred to in entries AAS ACA ACES ACGB AEU AHEW ALRA AMSU ARA ARP ARSA ASLS ATS AUL AWSS

Aberdeen Artists’ Society Aberdeen City Archives Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society Arts Council of Great Britain Amalgamated Engineering Union Association for the Higher Education of Women Abortion Law Reform Association Association for Moral and Social Hygiene Associate of the Royal Academy Air Raid Protection Associate of the Royal Society of Artists Association for Scottish Literary Studies Auxiliary Territorial Service Aberdeen University Library Aberdeen Women’s Suffrage Society

BCC BD BEM BFUW BGS BL BLEPS BM BMA BMWF BNA BSBI BSE BWTA

British Council of Churches Bachelor of Divinity British Empire Medal British Federation of University Women British Geological Survey British Library British Library of Economic and Political Science British Museum British Medical Association British Medical Women’s Federation British Nurses’ Association Botanical Society of the British Isles Botanical Society of Edinburgh British Women’s Temperance Association

CAP Common Agricultural Policy CBE Commander of the Order of the British Empire CCWE Central Committee on Women’s Employment CHE Campaign for Homosexual Equality CI Companion of the Crown of India CND Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament CPGB (CP) Communist Party of Great Britain CPL Central Public Library (Edinburgh) CSWG Church of Scotland Woman’s Guild (in 1997 the name changed to The Church of Scotland Guild) CTA Class Teachers’ Association CUKT Carnegie UK Trust CUWFA Conservative and Unionist Women’s Franchise Association xviii

Abbreviations

CWG CWS

Co-operative Women’s Guild Co-operative Wholesale Society

DBE DCS DSU DWCA

Dame of the British Empire Deaconess of the Church of Scotland Dundee Social Union Dundee Women Citizens’ Association

ECA EFDSS EIFF EIS ELEA EMS ENSEC ENSWS ESU EUL EWCA EWLA EWSS

Edinburgh College of Art English Folk Dance and Song Society Edinburgh International Film Festival Educational Institute of Scotland Edinburgh Ladies Educational Association Edinburgh Mathematical Society Edinburgh National Society for Equal Citizenship Edinburgh National Society for Women’s Suffrage Edinburgh Social Union Edinburgh University Library Edinburgh Women Citizens’ Association Edinburgh Women’s Liberal Association Edinburgh Women’s Suffrage Society

FANY FO FRCSEd FRIAS FRMA FRCP FRGS FRHistS FRS FRSE FSA FSAScot

First Aid Nursing Yeomanry Foreign Office Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh Fellow of the Royal Incorporation of Architects in Scotland Fellow of the Royal Museums Association Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society Fellow of the Royal Historical Society Fellow of the Royal Society Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh Food Standards Authority Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries (of Scotland)

GAHEW Glasgow Association for the Higher Education of Women GBE Dame or Knight Grand Cross of the British Empire GCStJ Bailiff or Dame Grand Cross of the Most Venerable Order of the Hospital of St John of Jerusalem GCVO Dame or Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order GCU Glasgow Caledonian University GLC Greater London Council GPO General Post Office GRPS Glasgow Royal Philosophical Society GSA Glasgow School of Art GSEC Glasgow Society for Equal Citizenship GSG Geological Society of Glasgow GSL Geological Society of London GSLA Glasgow Society of Lady Artists GSMD Guildhall School of Music and Drama GWCA Glasgow Women Citizens’ Association GWHA Glasgow Women’s Housing Association GWL Glasgow Women’s Library xix

Abbreviations

GWSAWS IBIS ICE ICN ICW IGS ILP ISTA ITGWU IWM IWSA

Glasgow and West of Scotland Association for Women’s Suffrage Imaginative Book Illustration Society Institution of Civil Engineers International Council of Nurses International Council of Women Institute of Geological Sciences Independent Labour Party International Seed Testing Association Irish Transport and General Workers’ Union Imperial War Museum International Women’s Suffrage Alliance

LCC LDV LEDS LLA LRAM LSCC LSE LT LWS LWT

London County Council Local Defence Volunteers Ladies’ Edinburgh Debating Society Lady Literate in Arts Licentiate of the Royal Academy of Music Ladies Scottish Climbing Club London School of Economics Lady of the Most Ancient and Most Noble Order of the Thistle Ladies’ Work Society London Weekend Television

MA MAs MBE MO MOH MRC MSA

Master of Arts Mathematics Association Member of the Order of the British Empire Medical Officer Medical Officer of Health Medical Research Council Museum of Science and Art

NA NALGO NAPSS NAWP NCW NEC NEWS NFWW NGS NHM NLS NMM NMS NPG NRA NRAS NRH NRS NSA NSEC NSWS

National Archives (previously PRO, Public Record Office), London National Association of Local Government Officers National Association for the Promotion of Social Science National Association of Women Pharmacists National Council of Women National Executive Committee Network of Ecumenical Women in Scotland National Federation of Women Workers National Galleries of Scotland Natural History Museum National Library of Scotland National Minority Movement National Museums of Scotland National Portrait Gallery National Register of Archives National Register of Archives Scotland New Register House National Records of Scotland (previously NAS, National Archives of Scotland) Nursery Schools Association National Society for Equal Citizenship National Society of Women’s Suffrage xx

Abbreviations

NTS NUHEW NUM NUSEC NUWM NUWSS NUWW

National Trust for Scotland National Union for the Higher Education of Women National Union of Mineworkers National Union of Societies for Equal Citizenship National Unemployed Workers’ Movement National Union of Women’s Suffrage Societies National Union of Women Workers

OBE OUP

Officer of the British Empire Oxford University Press

PC Pioneer Club PEN World association of writers (Poets, Playwrights, Editors, Essayists, Novelists) POW Prisoner of war PSMOHA People’s Story Museum, Oral History Archive, Edinburgh RA RAC RADA RAM RAMC RAS RBGE RCHS RCM RCPE RCSE RDS REHIS RGI(FA) RGS RHA RHS RHSoc RIAS RIBA RMPA RMS RNLI RRC RSA RSAMD RSBS RSCDS RSE RSGS RSHS RSM RSL RSPEE RSSPWC RSW

Royal Academy Royal Automobile Club Royal Academy of Dramatic Art Royal Academy of Music Royal Army Medical Corps Royal Astronomical Society Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh Royal Caledonian Horticultural Society Royal College of Music Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh Royal Dublin Society Royal Environmental Health Institute of Scotland Royal Glasgow Institute of Fine Arts Royal Geographical Society Royal Hibernian Academy Royal Horticultural Society Royal Humane Society Royal Incorporation of Architects in Scotland Royal Institute of British Architects Royal Medico-Psychological Association Royal Museum of Scotland (formerly RSM) Royal National Lifeboat Institution Royal Red Cross Royal Scottish Academy Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama Royal Society of British Sculptors Royal Scottish Country Dance Society Royal Society of Edinburgh Royal Scottish Geographical Society Royal Scottish Horticultural Society Royal Scottish Museum (now RMS) Royal Society of London Royal Society of Painter-Etchers and Engravers Royal Scottish Society of Painters in Watercolours Royal Society of Watercolourists xxi

Abbreviations

SA SAC SAMH SASA SAU SCC SCDA SCDS SCLWS SCM SCOW SCU SCWG SCWS SCWT SDF SDP SED SFC SFSS SFWSS SGH SLA SLF SLGA SMBA SMIC SMLA SNGMA SNP SNPG SOAPC SOE SOHC SPCC SPCK SPG SRBM SRGS SSA SSPV SSWA SSWCP STUC SWH SWHA SWLF SWMA SWRI

Society of Arts Scottish Arts Council (now Creative Scotland) Scottish Association for Mental Health Scottish Agricultural Science Agency Shop Assistants’ Union Scottish Churches’ Council Scottish Community Drama Association Scottish Country Dance Society Scottish Churches League for Woman Suffrage Student Christian Movement Scottish Convention of Women Scottish Christian Union Scottish Co-operative Women’s Guild Scottish Co-operative Wholesale Society Scottish Council for Women’s Trades Social Democratic Fellowship Social Democratic Party Scottish Education Department Scottish Flying Club Scottish Federation of Suffrage Societies Scottish Federation of Women’s Suffrage Societies Scottish Guild of Handicraft Society of Lady Artists Scottish Liberal Federation Scottish Ladies’ Golf Association Scottish Marine Biological Association Scottish Music Information Centre Scottish Modern Languages Association Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art Scottish National Party Scottish National Portrait Gallery Scottish Old Age Pensioners’ Campaign Special Operations Executive Scottish Oral History Centre Archives and Special Collections, University of Strathclyde Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge Six Point Group Society for the Recognition of the Brotherhood of Man Scottish Royal Geographical Society Scottish Society of Artists Scottish Society for the Prevention of Vivisection Scottish Society of Women Artists Scottish Society of Water Colour Painters Scottish Trades’ Union Congress Scottish Women’s Hospitals Scottish Women’s Hockey Association Scottish Women’s Liberal Federation Scottish Women’s Medical Association Scottish Women’s Rural Institutes

TGWU TMSA TWU

Tailor and Garment Workers’ Union Traditional Music and Song Association Textile Workers’ Union xxii

Abbreviations

UCL UFC UNRRA UPC USDAW

University College, London United Free Church United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Association United Presbyterian Church Union of Shop, Distributive and Allied Workers

VA VAD

Royal Order of Victoria and Albert Voluntary Aid Detachment

WAAC WAAF WASL WCA WCC WCTU WEA WES WFL WFS WFTU WGE WHO WIL WILPF WLF WLL WLUA WMC WNC WRAF WRI WRNS WRVS WSF WSFC WSL WSPU WTUL WVR WVS

Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps Women’s Auxiliary Air Force Women’s Anti-Suffrage League Women Citizens’ Associations – as Edinburgh WCA, Falkirk WCA etc. World Council of Churches Women’s Christian Temperance Union Workers’ Educational Association Women’s Engineering Society Women’s Freedom League Women’s Friendly Society Women’s Free Trade Union Women’s Guild of Empire World Health Organisation Women’s International League Women’s International League for Peace & Freedom Women’s Liberal Federation Women’s Labour League Women’s Liberal Unionist Association Women’s Missionary College Women’s National Commission Women’s Royal Air Force Women’s Rural Institutes Women’s Royal Naval Service Women’s Royal Voluntary Service Workers’ Suffrage Federation Women’s Suffrage Fellowship Collection (Museum of London) Women’s Suffrage League Women’s Social and Political Union Women’s Trade Union League Women’s Volunteer Reserve Women’s Voluntary Service (later WRVS, Women’s Royal Voluntary Service)

YCL YWCA

Young Communist League Young Women’s Christian Association

Publications referred to in entries Journals AJ Amer. Jour. Physics Amer. Jour. Science Amer. Libr. Ass. Bull. Amer. Quarterly BMJ

Aberdeen Journal American Journal of Physics American Journal of Science American Library Association Bulletin American Quarterly British Medical Journal xxiii

Abbreviations

Brit. Jour. Hist. Science BSS News Bull. Brit. Mycological Soc. Bull. Hist. Chem. Geog. Jour. Geol. Mag. Geol. Soc. of London Q. Jour. Hist. Edu. Rev. Int. Jour. Scot. Theatre IBIS Jour. Jour. Hist. Astr. Jour. Hist. Soc. South Australia Jour. Roy. Sanitary Institute Jour. Roy. Soc. Med. Jour. Scot. Soc. Art Hist. Kintyre Antiq. & Nat. Hist. Soc. LAC Jour. LSCC Jour. Nat. Geog. Mag. NZ Jour. Hist. NZ Med. Jour. Pharm. Jour. Proc. Roy. Coll. Phys. Edin. Proc. of the Geol. Soc. of London Proc. Roy. Music Assn. Proc. Soc. Antiquaries Scot. Proc. Soc. Psychical Research Rev. of Scot. Culture RIAS Newsletter SA SC Scot. Art Rev. Scot. Econ. and Soc. History Scot. Educ. Jour. Scot. Geog. Mag. Scot. Hist. Soc. Misc. Scot. Hist. Rev. Scot. Jour. Agric. Scot. Lab. Hist. Soc. Jour. Scot. Lit. Jour. Scot. Marine Biol. Ass. Ann. Rept. Soc. Arch. Historians of GB SSI STS Tas. Hist. Res. Ass. Papers Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. Trans. Bot. Soc. Edinburgh Trans. Dumf. and Gal. Nat. Hist. and Antiqu. Soc. Trans. Gael. Soc. Inverness Trans. Geol. Soc. Trans. RSE Trans. Roy. Soc. Lit.

British Journal for the History of Science Botanical Society of Scotland News Bulletin of the British Mycological Society Bulletin for the History of Chemistry Geographical Journal Geological Magazine Geological Society of London Quarterly Journal History of Education Review International Journal of Scottish Theatre Imaginative Book Illustration Society Journal Journal for the History of Astronomy Journal of the Historical Society of South Australia Journal of the Royal Sanitary Institute Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine Journal of the Scottish Society for Art History Kintyre Antiquarian and Natural History Society Ladies’ Alpine Club Journal Ladies’ Scottish Climbing Club Journal National Geographic Magazine New Zealand Journal of History New Zealand Medical Journal Pharmaceutical Journal Proceedings of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh Proceedings of the Geological Society of London Proceedings of the Royal Musical Association Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research Review of Scottish Culture Royal Incorporation of Architects in Scotland Newsletter Scottish Archives Scottish Co-operator Scottish Art Review Scottish Economic and Social History Scottish Education Journal Scottish Geographical Magazine Scottish History Society Miscellany Scottish Historical Review Scottish Journal of Agriculture Scottish Labour History Society Journal Scottish Literary Journal Scottish Marine Biology Association Annual Report Society of Architectural Historians of Great Britain Scottish Studies International Scottish Text Society Tasmanian Historical Research Association Paper Transactions of the American Philosophical Society Transactions of the Botanical Society of Edinburgh Transactions of the Dumfries and Galloway Natural History and Antiquarian Society Transactions of the Gaelic Society of Inverness Transactions of the Geological Society (of Glasgow/Edinburgh) Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature xxiv

Abbreviations

Trans. SNHAS Transactions of the Stirling Natural History and Archaeological Society Trans. Unit. Hist. Soc. Transactions of the Unitarian Historical Society Univ. Sussex Jour. Contemp. Hist. University of Sussex Journal of Contemporary History Wom. Hist. Rev. Women’s History Review Publications (other than journals) ADB Australian Dictionary of Biography AGC  A Guid Cause. The Women’s Suffrage Movement in Scotland. Leneman, L. (1991, 1995 rev. edn.) BDBF(1) The Biographical Dictionary of British Feminists, Volume 1: 1800–1930. Banks, O. (1985) BDBF(2)  The Biographical Dictionary of British Feminists, Volume 2: A Supplement, 1900–1945, Banks, O. (1990) BEHEP Bede’s Ecclesiastical History of the English People. Colgrave, B. and Mynors, R. A. B. (eds) 1991 BP Burke’s Peerage and Baronetage CDH The Canterbury Dictionary of Hymnology (online, 2013 and updates). Watson, J. R. and Hornby, S. (eds). https://hymnology.hymnsam.co.uk Crim. Trials Ancient Criminal Trials in Scotland, 3 vols. Pitcairn, R. (ed.) (1883) Deb. Debrett’s Peerage DBAWW A Dictionary of British and American Women Writers 1660–1800. Todd, J. (ed.) (1985) DLabB Dictionary of Labour Biography, 13 vols. Bellamy, J. M. et al. (eds) (1972–2010) DLB Gale Dictionary of Literary Biography. Brothers, B. and Gergits, J. (eds) (1997) DNB Dictionary of National Biography DNBNZ Dictionary of National Biography of New Zealand DSAA Dictionary of Scottish Art and Architecture. McEwan, P. J. M. (ed.) (2004) DWT Dundee Women’s Trail: twenty-five footsteps over four centuries. Henderson, I. M. (2008) ECSWW The Edinburgh Companion to Scottish Women’s Writing. Norquay, G. (ed.) (2012) eODNB  Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online edition; see also ODNB, below). www.oxforddnb.com ER The Exchequer Rolls of Scotland, 23 vols. Stuart, J. et al. (eds) (1878–1908) HHGW The Hidden History of Glasgow’s Women: the Thenew factor. King, E. (1993) HRHS The Heads of Religious Houses in Scotland. Watt, D. E. R. and Shead, N. (2001) HSWW A History of Scottish Women’s Writing. Gifford, D. and McMillan, D. (eds) (1997) IMDb Internet Movie Database MSW Modern Scottish Women: painters and sculptors 1815–1965. Strang, A. (ed.) (2015) MSWP Modern Scottish Women Poets. McMillan D. and Byrne M. (eds) (2003) NWSLR  The Novels of Walter Scott and his Literary Relations: Mary Brunton, Susan Ferrier and Christian Johnstone. Monnickendam, A. (2012) ODNB Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2004) (see also eODNB, above) RMS Register of the Great Seal of Scotland (Registrum Magni Sigilli), 11 vols. Paul, J. B. et al. (eds) (1882–1914) RPC Register of the Privy Council. Burton, J. M. et al. (eds) (1877–1970) RSS  Register of the Privy Seal of Scotland (Registrum Secreti Sigilli), 3 vols. Livingstone, M. et al. (eds) (1908–82) SB Scottish Biographies (1938) Scotichron Scotichronicon. Bower, W. 9 vols. Watt, D. E. R. et al. (eds) (1987–8) SHA  The Scotswoman at Home and Abroad: non-fiction writing 1700–1900. McMillan, D. (ed.) (1999) SLL Scottish Labour Leaders 1918–1939: a biographical dictionary. Knox, W. (ed.) (1984) SP Scots Peerage. Paul, J. B. (ed.) (1904–1914) SS The Scottish Suffragettes. Leneman, L. (2000) TA Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer of Scotland. Dickson, T. et al. (eds) (1877–1913) xxv

Abbreviations

WECS Women in Eighteenth Century Scotland: intimate, intellectual and public lives. Barclay, K. and Simonton, D. (eds) (2013) WoM Women of Moray. Bennet, S. et al. (eds) (2012) WSM The Women’s Suffrage Movement: a reference guide, 1866–1928. Crawford, E. (2001) WSMBI The Women’s Suffrage Movement in Britain and Ireland: a regional survey. Crawford, E. (2006) WWEE Women and Work in Eighteenth Century Edinburgh. Sanderson, E. C. (1996) WWW Who Was Who

xxvi

Readers’ Guide 1. Organisation and nomenclature. The dictionary is organised alphabetically. For individuals from early periods, for royalty in all periods, and for most Gaelic names, this usually means by forename (e.g. AEBBE; MARGARET, Saint, Queen of Scotland; CATRIONA NIC FHEARGHAIS). For later periods, and for the majority of subjects, this is by surname (e.g. KAY, Christina). For women who married, this may take the form HILL, Amelia, n. Paton, (n. = née, maiden name); or KING, Jessie, m. Taylor, (m. = married) indicating the name of the subject’s husband, whether or not she adopted the name. Because Scottish women generally kept their own surname on marriage up to c. 1750, in entries for subjects living before this date, the husband’s surname is not listed in the heading. Details of any marriages are included in the body of the entry. For subjects dating from after c. 1750, who married more than once, m1, m2, etc. refer to first and subsequent marriages. Square brackets indicate a pseudonym: e.g. DAVISON, Euphemia [May Moxon]. Round brackets indicate an alternative perhaps more familiar name, e.g. LEE, Janet (Jennie). Where a subject might be searchable under more than one name, a cross-reference is provided. Names beginning with Mac, Mc or M’ are listed consecutively, as if they began with Mac. 2. Parents. The names of parents of subjects are given when known. Omission indicates lack of information. Unless otherwise indicated, the parents of the subject were married to one another. 3. Co-subjects. Over 250 entries also include a ­co-subject (in bold type): sisters, colleagues, partners, or women in some way associated with the main subject. Co-subjects are listed separately on p. xxxi, and in the thematic index (see 6 below). 4. Group and joint entries. There are four group entries: Bletchley Park Women Recruits; the ‘Four Maries’ – the attendants of Mary, Queen of Scots; the ‘Glasgow Girls’, women artists from the Glasgow School of Art; and the ‘Scottish Women’s

Hospitals’, an all-women initiative of the First World War. Some of the leading members of these groups have separate entries as well. There are several joint entries, listed under one of their names with the rest treated as co-subjects. 5. Cross-referencing between entries. An *asterisk before a name indicates that there is a separate entry on that individual. By following threads, readers will be able to trace pathways through the dictionary linking networks of women. 6. Thematic index. To follow up a field, such as medicine, media or women’s suffrage, readers should use the thematic index (pp. 470 ff.), which contains 108 headings and includes all subjects and co-subjects under their chief activities. Many names appear under more than one heading. 7. Abbreviations within entries. Abbreviations have been used for institutions or organisations, ranging from the well known (STUC = Scottish Trades Union Congress) to the less familiar (GAHEW = Glasgow Association for the Higher Education of Women). The reader is referred to the full list of abbreviations on pp. xviii ff. 8. Further information and sources. Every entry contains a note about the sources of information and possible further reading, listed in the following order: archive source; works by the subject; secondary sources. For reasons of space, here too a number of abbreviations have been used, e.g. NLS = National Library of Scotland. The full list is on pp. xxiii ff. A frequent reference is ODNB (2004), which refers to the printed version of the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. A number of references are to the ongoing online update at http:// www.oxforddnb.com, cited as eODNB. When prefixed with an asterisk thus *ODNB, this indicates that the same contributor wrote the ODNB entry. The mention (Bibl.) indicates that a bibliography is provided by that source. For writers with a long list of publications, reference is made to bibliographies. Generally, websites are only listed if they offer essential information (and were correct at the time

xxvii

Readers’ Guide

of going to press). Simply typing a subject’s name into a search engine will often yield results. 9. Contributors. The initials at the end of each entry identify the contributor; for the full list of contributors, see pp. x ff.

  The symbol ‡ next to a name indicates that there is an illustration of that subject in one of the Plates sections.

xxviii

New Entries Acquroff, Helen (1831–1887) Althaus-Reid, Marcella (1952–2009) Annand, Louise (1915–2012) Arran, Fiona, Countess of (1918–2013) Baird, Joyce (1929–2014) Baird, Matilda (May) (1901–1983) Balfour, Harriet (1818–1858) Balneaves, Elizabeth (1911–2006) Baltacha, Elena (1983–2014) Barclay, Williamina (1883–1975) Barnett, Euphemia (1890–1970) Bell (b.c. 1750) Bletchley Park Women Recruits Bond, Elizabeth (b. c. 1767, d. 1839) Boyman, Janet (b. before 1548, d. 1572) Brown, Betty (1928–2016) Brown, Janet (1923–2011) Bryans, Anne (1919–2004) Buchan, Jane (Janey) (1926–2012) Burnley Campbell, Margaret (1858–1938) Burns, Elizabeth (1957–2015) Caddy, Eileen (1917–2006) Cairns, Elizabeth (1685–1741) Campbell, Dorothea (1793–1863) Campbell, Jane, Lady Kenmure (b. before 1607, d. 1675) Campbell, Marioun (b. c. 1540s, d. after 1601) Carmichael, Kay (1925–2009) Cavanagh, Catherine (1951–2008) Chilton, Margaret (1875–1963) Clapperton, Jane (1832–1914) Cobbold, Lady Evelyn (1867–1963) Collace, Katharine (c. 1635–c. 1697) Cooper, Brigid (1913–1983) Craigmyle, Elizabeth (Bessie) (1863–1933) Crofton, Eileen (1919–2010) Cumming, Jane (1795/6–1844) Curran, Agnes (1920–2005) Dickson Wright, Clarissa (1947–2014) Douglas, Cecilia (1772–1862) Douglas, Lady Jane (1698–1753) Douthwaite, Patricia (1934–2002) Ewing, Margaret (1945–2006) Farquhar, Barbara (1815–1875) Farquharson, Marian (1846–1912) Farquharson, Marjorie (1953–2016)

Findlay, Kathryn (1953–2014) Fisher, Ray (1940–2011) Fletcher, Elizabeth (Betty) (1731–1758) Forbes, Katherine (c. 1583–c. 1652) Forbes-Sempill, Elizabeth (1912–1991) Fraser, Lady Marion (1932–2016) Fuchs, Eileen (1920–2013) Geissler, Alison (1907–2011) Gilchrist, Mary (1882–1947) Girling, Elizabeth (1913–2005) Gordon, Henrietta, Duchess of (1681–1760) Gordon, Maria (1864–1939) Gordon-McKay, Helen (1933–2014) Grant, Beatrice (baptised 1761, d. 1845) Grant, Katherine (1845–1928) Gray, Elspet (1929–2013) Hamilton, Agnes (c. 1794–1870) Hamilton, Helen (1927–2013) Hamilton, Katherine, Duchess of Atholl ­(1662–1707) Hamilton, Margaret, Countess of Panmure ­(1668–1731) Harrison, Margaret (1918–2015) Hay, Jane (1864–1914) Hepburn, Anne (1925–2016) Hunter, Allison (1942–2013) Hunter, Mollie (1922–2012) Innes, Sue (1948–2005) Isabella Bruce, Queen of Norway (1272–1358) Jarvie, Margaret (1928–2004) Jones, Beti (1919–2006) Kay, Christian (1940–2016) Kaye, Dinah (1924–2011) Keir, Elizabeth (1750s–1834) Ker, Anne, Countess of Lothian (c. 1615–1667) Kerr, Deborah (1921–2007) Knight, Margaret (1903–1983) Lamont Stewart, Murdina (Ena) (1912–2006) Legge, Isabella (1812–1884) Leith, Anne (fl. 1740s) Levison, Mary (1923–2011) Lothian, Antonella (Tony), Marchioness of Lothian (1922–2007) Low, Bet (1924–2007) Lyon, Jane (1771–1842) MacAskill, Ishbel (1941–2011) xxix

New Entries

McCrindle, Jennifer (1968–2014) MacDonald, Margo (1943–2014) Macgregor, Janet (1920–2005) McKay, Ailsa (1963–2014) McKay, Anne (fl. 1740s–50s) MacKenzie, Anna, Countess of Balcarres ­(1621–1707) MacKenzie, Joan (1929–2007) Mackenzie, Katherine (1773–1844) Mackinnon, Doris (1883–1956) Maclagan, Mary (1853–1943) McLellan, Sadie (1914–2007) MacLennan, Elizabeth (1938–2015) Macnaughtan, Sarah (1864–1916) MacNeil, Flora (1928–2015) Macquarie, Elizabeth (1778–1835) Malloch, Elizabeth (1910–2000) Mann, Janet (Jessie) (1805–1867) Matheson, Kay (1928–2013) Maxwell, Darcy (1742–1810) Meechie, Helen (1938–2000) Michie, Janet ‘Ray’ (1934–2008) Millar, Ella Morison (1869–1959) Miller, Emily (1871–1962) Mitchell, Elizabeth (1880–1980) Moberg, Gun (1941–2007) Montgomerie, Susanna (1689/90–1780) Murray, Annabella, Countess of Mar (1536–1603) Murray, Catherine, Countess of Dunmore ­(1814–1886) Murray, Helen (c. 1708–1777) Murray, Noreen (1935–2011) Myles, Margaret (1892–1988) Nairne, Lady Margaret (1669–1747) Newstead, Isabel (1955–2007) Norgrove, Linda (1974–2010) Oliver, Cordelia (1923–2009) Orr, Christine (1899–1963) Owens, Agnes (1926–2014) Paterson-Brown, June (1932–2009) Paton, Fenella (1901–1949) Pearson, Alison (c. 1553–1588) Peebles, Barbara (fl. 1660–1666) Phillips, Caroline (1870–1954) Quibell, Annie (1861–1927) Ralphson, Mary (1698–1808) Ransford, Tessa (1938–2015) Redpath, Jean (1937–2014)

Reoch, Elspeth (d. 1616) Ritchie, Marjorie (1948–2015) Robertson, Muriel (1883–1973) Rooney, Maureen (1947–2003) Ross, Elizabeth (1789–1875) Sampson, Margery (1890–1915) Savage, AgnesYewande (1906–1964) Scot, Elizabeth (1729–1789) Shearer, Moira (1926–2006) Shire, Helena Mennie (1912–1991) Skelton, Pamela (1938–2014) Skinnider, Margaret (1892–1971) Smith, Anne (1944–2013) Smith, Christina (1809–1893) So, Pamela (1947–2010) Somerville, Mary (1897–1963) Spark, Muriel (1918–2006) Steven, Helen (1942–2016) Stewart, Margaret Enid (1907–1986) Stewart, Mary (1916–2014) Strathie, Dame Lesley (1955–2012) Sulter, Maud (1960–2008) Sutherland, Anne Bryson (1922–2011) Sutherland, Stella (1924–2015) Swankie, Emily (1915–2008) Symon, Mary (1863–1938) Tait Black, Janet (1844–1918) Tayler, Helen (1869–1951) Templeton, Elizabeth (1945–2015) Tennant, Emma (1937–2017) Thomson, Elizabeth (1847–1918) Towser (1963–1987) Trail, Susan (baptised 1720–1791) Turner, Annie Helen (1901–1977) Urquhart, Margery (1912–2007) Vakil, Merbai (1868–1941) Valentine, Jessie (1915–2006) Walker, Marion (1597–1614) Watkins, Margaret (1884–1969) Wells, Malvina (c. 1804–1887) Wigham, Elizabeth (1748–1827) Wishart, Sylvia (1936–2008) Wolfe Murray, Stephanie (1941–2017) Wolff, Sulammith (1924–2009) Wood Allen, Jenny (1911–2010) Wormald, Jennifer (1942–2015) Young, Lorna (1952–1996)

xxx

Joint and Co-subjects Abbot, Frances see Rae, Jane (1872–1959) Adair, Elizabeth see Kesson, Jessie (1916–1994) Aife (of Alba) see Scáthach (of Skye) (fl. c. 500 bc) Alison, Isabel see McLachlan (Maclaughlan), Margaret (b. c. 1614) Allan, Agnes see Bletchley Park Women Recruits Anderson, Christina see Watson, Alexandra Mary Chalmers (Mona) (1872–1936) Argyll, Isabella, Countess of see Iseabail ní Mheic Cailein (fl. 1480s–1490s) Armour, Mary see Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920) Armstrong, Isabella see Macfarlane, Jessie ­(1843–1871) Arnot, Agnes see Graham, Margaret Manson (1860–1933) Baillie, Grisie see Baillie, Lady Grisell (1665–1746) Bates, Diana see Rushforth, Margaret Winifred (1885–1983) Baxter, Ena see Baxter, Ethelreda (Ethel) (1883–1963) Baxter, Margaret see Baxter, Ethelreda (Ethel) (1883–1963) Beaton, Margaret see Chisholm, Jane (Jean) (fl. 1542–57) Beaton, Mary see Maries, The Four (b. 16th century) Beaty, Moira see Bletchley Park Women Recruits Beckett, Frances see Murray, Catherine, Countess of Dunmore (1814–1886) Beedie, Margaret see Bletchley Park Women Recruits Benzie, Isa see Somerville, Mary (1897–1963) Black, Barbara see Blackwell, Elizabeth (baptised 1707, d. c. 1758) Black, Margaret see Paterson, Grace Chalmers (1843–1925) Blaikie, Margaret see Macpherson, Annie Parlane (1825–1904) Blatherwick, Lily see Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920) Borthwick, Sarah see Borthwick, Jane Laurie (1813–1897) Bowes, Marjory see Stewart, Margaret, of Ochiltree (c. 1548–1611) Boyd, Marion see Drummond, Margaret (b. before 1496, d. 1502)

Brown, Agnes see Blair, Catherine Hogg (1872–1946) Brown, Helen see Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920) Brown, Irene see Bletchley Park Women Recruits Brown, Jessie see Blair, Catherine Hogg (1872–1946) Burkhauser, Jude see Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920) Burton, Mary Elizabeth see Burton, Mary ­(1819–1909) Campbell, Lady Victoria see Grant, Katherine Whyte (1845–1928) Chambers, Norah see Thomson, Margaret Henderson (1902–1982) Collace, Jean see Collace, Katharine (c. 1635–c. 1697) Cook, Rachel see Lumsden, Louisa Innes ­(1840–1935) Cowper, Christian see Bethune, Margaret ­(1820–1887) Crabbie, Iona see Bletchley Park Women Recruits Cranstoun, Jane Anne see Stewart, Helen D’Arcy (1765–1838) Cumming, Alice see Gilchrist, Marion (1864–1952) Cumming Gordon, Helen see Cumming, Jane (1795/6–1844) Davidson, Harriet Miller see Miller, Lydia Falconer (baptised 1812, d. 1876) De la Cour, Ethel see Wright, Christian Edington Guthrie (1844–1907) Dean, Stansmore see Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920) Dewar, de Courcy see Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920) Dickson, Hester see Dickson, (Katherine) Joan Balfour (1921–1994) Douglas, Elizabeth see Fletcher, Christian (fl. 1619/20–1691) Douglas, Isabella, Countess of Mar see Annabella Drummond, Queen of Scotland (b. before 1367, d. 1401) Droy, Doris see Clark, Grace (1905–1995) Drummond, Cherry, (Lady Strange) see Drummond, Victoria Alexandrina (1894–1978) Dunnett, Isabella see Bletchley Park Women Recruits xxxi

Joint and Co-subjects

Emslie, Isabel see Scottish Women’s Hospitals Erskine, Lady Mary see Fletcher, Christian (fl. 1619/20–1691) Evans, Helen see Archdale, Helen Alexander (1876–1949); Daniell, Madeline Margaret (1832–1906); Jex-Blake, Sophia Louisa (1840–1912) Fairfield, Josephine see Fairfield, Cecily Isabel (1892–1983) Fairlie, Alison see Bletchley Park Women Recruits Findlater, Jane see Findlater, Mary (Williamina) (1865–1963) Fleming, Mary see Maries, The Four (b. 16th century) Forbes, Anne see Read, Katharine (1723–1778) Forman, Jane see Chisholm, Jane (Jean) (fl. 1542–57) Fraser, Annie see Fraser, Helen Miller (1881–1979) French, Annie see Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920) Geddes, Margaret see Watson, Alexandra Mary Chalmers (Mona) (1872–1936) Geddes, Nora see Geddes, Anna (1857–1917) Geddie, Emilia see Collace, Katharine (c. 1635–c. 1697) Gessler, Pauline see Lyon, Jane (1771–1842) Gibson, Margaret see Lewis, Agnes Smith (1843–1920) Gillan, Evelyn see Raffles, Frances Rachel (Franki) (1955–1994) Gilmour, Margaret see Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920) Gilmour, Mary see Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920) Gordon, Mary see Scottish Women’s Hospitals Govan, Jean see Boyd, Maggie Paton Davidson (1905–1999) Graham, Jane see Graham, Helen (1806–1896) Grainger, Agnes see Hurd, Dorothy Iona (1883–1945) Gray, Christian see Chalmers, Margaret (b. c. 1758) Gregory, Andrina see Gregory, Helen (Ella) (1898–1946) Gregory, Margaret see Gregory, Helen (Ella) (1898–1946) Greig, Clara see Greig, Jane Stocks (Jean) (1872–1939) Greig, Flos see Greig, Jane Stocks (Jean) (1872–1939) Greig, Janet see Greig, Jane Stocks (Jean) (1872–1939) Griffith, Nora see Quibell, Annie (1861–1927) Hadfield, Jean see MacDougall of MacDougall, Margaret Hope Garnons (1913–1998) Haig, Florence see Burton, Mary Rose Hill (1857–1900)

Hardy, Lileen see Maclagan, Mary (1853–1943) Harris, Jane see Harris, Amelia (1815–1891) Harvey, Marion see McLachlan (Maclaughlan), Margaret (b. c. 1614) Hasluck, Margaret see Fairfield, Cecily Isabel (1892–1983) Hawkins, Susannah see Chalmers, Margaret (b. c. 1758) Hendrick, Petronella see Balfour, Harriet (1818–1858) Hendry, Janet see Drinkwater, Winifred (1913–1996) Henry, Lydia see Scottish Women’s Hospitals Higgins, Lizzie see Robertson, Regina Christina (Jeannie) (1908–1975) Hogg, Anna Porteous see Hogg, Jane Donaldson (1834–1900) Houston, Ethel see Bletchley Park Women Recruits Houston, Sarah (Billie) see Houston, Catherine Rita Murphy Gribbin (Renee) (1902–1980) Hunter, Nellie see Scottish Women’s Hospitals Innes, Katherine see Burton, Mary Rose Hill (1857–1900) Isabella of Scotland, Countess of Norfolk see Margaret of Scotland, Countess of Kent (b. before 1195, buried 1259) Isabella, Countess of Lennox see Joan Beaufort, Queen of Scotland (d. 1445) Jagannadham, Annie see Vakil, Merbai (1868–1941) Jamieson, Hilda see Fuchs, Eileen (1920–2013) Jeffrey, Mabel see Inglis Clark, Jane (Janie) Isabella (c. 1859–1950) Joan of the Tower, Queen of Scotland see Margaret Logie, Queen of Scotland (c. 1330–c.1373) Johnson, Rachel see Barclay, Williamina (1883–1975) Johnston, Elizabeth see Flucker, Barbara (1784–1869) Johnston, Sophia see Trotter, Menie (b. 1740, d. after 1828); Barnard, Lady Anne (1750–1825) Johnstone, Rona see Johnstone, Dorothy (1892–1980) Jones, Mabel see Cadell, Grace Ross (1855–1918) Kemp, Margaret see Chilton, Margaret (1875–1963) Kennedy-Fraser, Patuffa see Kennedy-Fraser, Marjory (1857–1930) Kerr, Helen see Maclagan, Mary (1853–1943) King, Mary see Rough, Alison (b. c. 1480, d. 1535) Lamb, Elizabeth see Hoppringle (or Pringle), Isabella (d. 1538) Lamb, Helen see Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920)

xxxii

Joint and Co-subjects

Laurie, Jessie see Scottish Women’s Hospitals Lillie, Helen see Scottish Women’s Hospitals Lindsay, Anna see Irwin, Margaret Hardinge (1858–1940) Lindsay, Anne see Fletcher, Christian (fl. 1619/ 20–1691) Lindsay, Sophia see MacKenzie, Anna, Countess of Balcarres (1621–1707) Livingston, Mary see Maries, The Four (b. 16th century) Loftus, Cecilia (Cissy) see Loftus, Marie (1857–1940) Lumsden, Katharine Maria see Lumsden, Rachel Frances (1835–1908) M’Dougal, Helen see Log, Lucky (Margaret) (b. c. 1788) Macbean, Mary see Carmichael, Elizabeth Catherine (Ella) (1870–1928) MacCallum, Ann see Murray, Catherine, Countess of Dunmore (1814–1886) MacDonald, Catherine see Campbell, Marion (1867–1970) Macdonald, Classinda see Balfour, Harriet ­(1818–1858) Macdonald, Clementina see Esslemont, Mary (1891–1984) Macdonald, Frances see Macdonald, Margaret (1864–1933) MacDougall of MacDougall, Coline see MacDougall of MacDougall, Margaret Hope Garnons (1913–1998) McGowan, Mary see Kaye, Dinah (1924–2011) McGregor, Jessie see Inglis, Elsie Maude (1864–1917) McGuire, Violet see Swankie, Emily (1915–2008) McKinnon, Catherine see Lyon, Jane (1771–1842) McLachlan, Cecile see Bletchley Park Women Recruits McLaren, Ottilie see McLaren, Priscilla Bright (1815–1906) McMillan, Rachel see McMillan, Margaret ­(1860–1931) Madeleine of France see Mary of Guise, Queen of Scotland (1515–1560) Manson, Ethel see Stewart, Eliza (later Isla) ­(1855–1910) Margaret of England, Queen of Scotland see Joan of England, Queen of Scotland (1210–1238) Margaret of Scotland the younger (Marjory) see Margaret of Scotland, Countess of Kent (b. before 1195, buried 1259) Marshall, Dorothy see Marshall, Sheina MacAlister (1896–1977)

Marshall, Margaret see Marshall, Sheina MacAlister (1896–1977) Marshall, Mary see Watson, Alexandra Mary Chalmers (Mona) (1872–1936) Mary of Boulogne see Matilda (Edith) of Scotland (c. 1080–c. 1118) Masson, Flora see Masson, Rosaline (1867–1949) Mayne, Katherine see Rough, Alison (b. c. 1480, d. 1535) Millar, Robina see Cullen, Margaret (1767–1837) Milligan, Frances see Liston, Esther Wilson ­(1896–1989) Milne, Agnes see Williamson, Euphemia (Effie) (1846–1929) Milne, Christian see Chalmers, Margaret (b. c. 1758) Moore, Eleanor Allen see Tanner, Ann Ailsa Louise (1923–2001); Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920) Moorhead, Alice see Thomson, Emily Charlotte (c. 1864–1955) Morrison, Agnes Brysson see Morrison, Agnes N. Brysson Inglis (1903–c. 1986) Morrison, Peggy see Morrison, Agnes N. Brysson Inglis (1903–1986) Mortimer, Katherine see Margaret Logie, Queen of Scotland (c. 1330–c. 1373) Moxon, May see Davison, Euphemia (1906–1996) Muir, Miss see Lennox, Agnes (fl. 1839–1841) Murray, Sarah see Aust, Sarah (1744–1811) Murray, Sylvia see Murray, Eunice Guthrie ­(1878–1960); Murray, Frances Porter (1843–1919) Nasmyth, Anne see Nasmyth, Jane (1788–1867) Nasmyth, Barbara see Nasmyth, Jane (1788–1867) Nasmyth, Charlotte see Nasmyth, Jane (1788–1867) Nasmyth, Margaret see Nasmyth, Jane (1788–1867) Nasmyth, Elizabeth see Nasmyth, Jane (1788–1867) Neil, Christina see Neil, Annie Innes Clydesdale (Andy) (1924–2004) Newbery, Mary see Newbery, Jessie (1864–1948) Nichols, Sarah see Lyon, Jane (1771–1842) Orme, Emily see Masson, Rosaline (1867–1949) Parker, Frances (Fanny) see Moorhead, Ethel Agnes Mary (1869–1955) Paterson, Mary see Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920) Patrick, Jane (Jenny) see McDonald, Camelia Ethel (1909–1960) Petrie, Grace see Moar, May (Marjory) (1825–1894) Pirret, Mary see Pirret, Ruth (1874–1939) Porter, Anna see Porter, Jane (1776–1850) Pringle, Janet see Hoppringle (or Pringle), Isabella (d. 1538) xxxiii

Joint and Co-subjects

Rintoul, Leonora see Baxter, Evelyn Vida ­(1879–1959) Robertson, Isabel see Gillespie, Margaret (1841–1913) Robinson, Isabella see Dods, Mary Diana (c. 1790–c. 1830) Ross, Elizabeth see Scottish Women’s Hospitals Sackville, Lady Margaret see Symon, Mary ­(1863–1938) Sandeman, Mary see Campbell, Marion, of Kilberry (1919–2000) Sang, Flora see Sidgwick, Eleanor Mildred (Nora) (1845–1936) Sang, Jane see Sidgwick, Eleanor Mildred (Nora) (1845–1936) Savill, Agnes see Scottish Women’s Hospitals Scott, Caroline see Douglas, Lady Frances ­(1750–1817) Scott Moncrieff, Ann Pamela see Bletchley Park Women Recruits Seton, Mary see Maries, The Four (b. 16th century) Shaw, Mary see Shaw, Clarice Marion (1883–1946) Short, May see Allan, Georgina Armour (1913–1969) Sinclair, Lise see Sutherland, Stella (1924–2015) Smeal, Jane see Wigham, Eliza (1820–1899) Smith, Dorothy see Bletchley Park Women Recruits Smith, Katherine see Fletcher, Christian (fl. 1619/20–1691) Smith, Lucy see Inglis Clark, Jane (Janie) Isabella (c. 1859–1950) Smyth, Dorothy see Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920) Spaldarge, Janet see Bane (or Clerk), Margaret (b. before 1567, d. 1597) Spens, Janet see Watson, Margaret Alexandra Hannan (1873–1959) Stevenson, Louisa see Stevenson, Flora Clift ­(1839–1905) Stewart, Annabella see Stewart, Margaret ­(1424–1445) Stewart, Eleanor see Stewart, Margaret (1424–1445) Stewart, Isabella see Stewart, Margaret (1424–1445) Stewart, Joanna see Stewart, Margaret (1424–1445)

Stewart, Margaret, Countess of Angus see Annabella Drummond, Queen of Scotland (b. before 1367, d. 1401) Stewart, Mary see Stewart, Margaret (1424–1445) Stewart, Sheila see Stewart, Isabella (Belle) ­(1906–1997) Stewart, Ysobel see Milligan, Jean Callander ­(1886–1978) Storie, Mary see Harris, Amelia (1815–1891) Sutherland, Annie (Nan) see Hutchison, Mary (1915–1994) Taylor, Marion see Grierson, Ruby Isabel ­(1903–1940) Todd, Margaret see Jex-Blake, Sophia Louisa (1840–1912) Turberville, Ruby see Grieve, Mary Margaret (1906–1998) Waddell, Janet see Waddell, Roberta Johanna (Bertha) (1907–1980) Waldie, Jane see Waldie, Charlotte Ann (1788–1859) Walton, Constance see Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920) Watson, Jean see Keddie, Henrietta (1827–1914) Wells, Annie see Vakil, Merbai (1868–1941) Wemyss, Jean see Wemyss, Lady Margaret ­(1630–1648) West, Elizabeth see Cairns, Elizabeth (1685–1741) White, Mary see Bryson, Agnes Ann (b. c. 1831, d. 1907) Wilkie, Helen see Wilkie, Annot Erskine ­(1874–1925) Williamson, Ella see Hutchison, Mary (1915–1994) Wilson, Agnes see McLachlan (Maclaughlan), Margaret (b. c. 1614) Wilson, Margaret see McLachlan (Maclaughlan), Margaret (b. c. 1614) Woods, Marianne see Pirie, Jane (1779–1833) Wright, Camilla see Wright, Frances (Fanny) (1795–1852) Zinkeisen, Anna see Zinkeisen, Doris Clare ­(1898–1991)

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Preface to The New Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women, the first of its kind, was published in 2006 (paperback 2007). In 2015, Edinburgh University Press commissioned this New Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women, a revised and enlarged version. Three of the editors remain the same. Our colleague Sue Innes died in 2005, and Jane Rendall, previously an associate editor, and a specialist on Scottish cultural life in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, has joined us as a full editor.1 What is different about the new version of the Dictionary? This preface explains the policy of revision, enlargement and other changes. For a full description of the thinking behind the volume and the criteria for selection, see the Introduction to the 2006 volume, reproduced below (pp. xxxviii ff.). On the last point, we would remind readers that no living persons are included.

(for example, Scotland’s People, Wikipedia) in our sources sections, unless there is a special reason: when for instance information is not easily available elsewhere, or for useful cross-references. There is one exception: the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (ODNB), originally published in sixty-four volumes in 2004, and now regularly updated online. We referenced the original ODNB in 2006, and we share some contributors. Our policy here is to keep the original references, which readers can still find both in print and online.3 If a subject has been included in the ODNB only since 2004, the reference appears as ‘eODNB’. The ODNB website (www.oxforddnb.com) can be accessed via institutions, including public libraries.

Enlargement

Illustrations The New Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women includes sixty black-and-white plates, of which forty are new to this volume.

Revision and updating All the original entries from 2006 have been retained and checked by their authors and/or the editors, correcting errors and adding new information. This includes the findings of recent research and, in the sections on sources attached to each entry, recently published works such as biographies. We now know a great deal more, for instance, about the life and interests of Helen MacFarlane (1818–1860), the first translator of The Communist Manifesto. These references acknowledge the many titles published on Scottish history and culture in the last ten years or so.2 Furthermore, the general-reference landscape has completely changed in the last decade: more resources are now available online than in 2006, and we have assumed that readers looking further will refer to commonly used search engines. We include some specialised website addresses, with the proviso that they were active at the time of going to press, but do not list general-reference websites

A total of 181 entirely new entries have been added, with 99 new co-subjects. (See the lists on pp. xxxi ff.) These are of two kinds. Certain women from earlier centuries not present in the original Dictionary are now included, because fresh information or research has brought them to light. Approximately half the new entries, however, are on women active in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, who have died in recent years (before 2017). It was difficult to make both kinds of selection. When this project started, we had a free hand, since no such book had been published before. There were 825 entries, and word lengths could be liberal. For the new Dictionary, space constraints are greater. Keeping within the covers of a single volume has meant imposing limits both on the number and length of new entries. In the interests of inclusiveness, and because of the many proposals received, we have commissioned more names, at some expense of word lengths. We hope readers will use to the full the sources sections pointing to further material.

New entries Which Scottish women are included here for the first time? As before, we have tried to provide a

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wide range geographically, socially, in terms of historical period, and in the activities covered. We have rectified some unaccountable previous omissions, notably Dame Maria Ogilvie Gordon (1864–1939), geologist and campaigner for women’s rights; and we have given full entries to some former co-subjects (see Lady Jane Douglas and Anna MacKenzie). Several new entries for the early modern period reflect increasing scholarly interest in the informal political power Scottish women might exercise: one example is Annabella Murray, Countess of Mar, who was entrusted with the upbringing of James VI and had considerable influence over her young charge. Certain Jacobite women appear here for the first time: Henrietta, Duchess of Gordon and Margaret, Lady Nairne, as well as humbler women loyal to the cause, such as Anne Leith and Anne McKay. The importance of the daughters of the third Duchess of Hamilton – Margaret, Countess of Panmure and Katherine, Duchess of Atholl – in preserving the powerful interests of their families is highlighted. Other new entries reflect scholarship on past Scottish cultural figures whose work is being reassessed. Elizabeth Keir is one of the few Scottish women novelists of the eighteenth century. The writer of religious autobiography Katherine Collace, and the Shetland poet of the Napoleonic period Dorothea Primrose Campbell, also appear, as do Elizabeth Bond, author of the Letters of a Village Governess (1814) and Aberdeen-based poet Bessie Craigmyle. There are new entrants too from Scotland’s Gaelic culture: see Joan Mackenzie (Seonag NicCoinnich) and Margaret Burnley Campbell, who in 1907 became the first woman President of An Comunn Gaidhealach. More representatives of the long Scottish diaspora appear here, such as Isabella Bruce, queen consort of Norway in the thirteenth century; Jane Lyon, governess to the Russian imperial family; and Christina Smith, who left Perthshire for Australia in 1839 and recorded the culture and language of the Buandig people. In the light of current research, we also wished to mark, through documented individuals, what Scottish engagement in a slave-owning and imperial economy meant to women in Scotland. Women from Scottish slaveowning families – Cecilia Douglas and Katherine Mackenzie, for instance – benefited greatly from the profits of the plantation economy and the compensation paid to slave-owners after 1833. Relatively few women slaves are documented as living in Scotland, but Malvina Wells, born into slavery

on a Scottish-owned estate in Grenada c. 1804, ended her days as an Edinburgh domestic servant. Harriet Balfour was one of three former slaves from Surinam who came to live in Scotland, where she died in 1858. Slavery apart, one result of Scottish involvement in the British Empire was that women from different countries and ethnic origins might come to Scotland. Jane Cumming, daughter of an unknown Indian mother and a Scottish father, was sent to Morayshire in 1802 and brought up in her father’s family. The first Indian women to seek medical qualifications in Scotland, Merbai Ardesai Vakil and Annie Wardlaw Jagannadham, qualified as doctors in Glasgow and in Edinburgh respectively, in the late nineteenth century. As for women born in the twentieth century, this was a time when women’s lives changed radically, in Scotland as elsewhere: barriers fell, occupations opened up, rights were gained. ‘Women of achievement’, often isolated individuals in the past, reached significant numbers in recent generations. Our selection of Scottish women who have died in recent years therefore consists largely of women who have made a mark in their various fields of activity, even if they had relatively short lives. Among such additions, there are naturally some famous names. Scottish-born women, such as the novelist Muriel Spark, the film actress Deborah Kerr, or the ballet-dancer Moira Shearer, became well known internationally. Others, like traditional singers Jean Redpath and Ray Fisher, the politician Margo Macdonald, or the Scottish Poetry Library founder, Tessa Ransford, were significant figures nationally within Scotland; still others had a resonance in certain circles, local, national, within the UK, or international, without necessarily being household names (for instance, historian Jenny Wormald, architect Kathryn Findlay, human rights worker Marjory Farquharson). Although we have not added any further representatives of ‘ordinary’ occupations (see the Introduction that follows), many women are recorded here who made a significant difference to people’s lives in Scotland, without always hitting the headlines (such as feminist economist Ailsa McKay). We have also included some individuals who were ‘the first woman’ in some respect: policewoman Emily Miller; bellringer Margery Sampson; powerboat racer Fiona, countess of Arran; Lesley Strathie, the first woman to head HMRC. Also represented are women who have come to prominence in fields of activity of recent significance, or previously less open to women: ministers of religion

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(see Pamela Skelton); protesters against nuclear arms (see Helen Steven); foreign aid workers (see Linda Norgrove); film directors (see Budge Cooper, Elizabeth Balneaves). One new group entry concerns a selection of Scottish women who worked at the code-breaking centre in Bletchley Park during the Second World War (see Bletchley Park Women Recruits). In some cases, recent attention has been directed to less-well-known or underestimated women writers (Agnes Owens, Elizabeth Burns) and artists (painter Pat Douthwaite, glass artists Alison Geissler and Sadie McLellan).4 Historically, Scotland has been a land of emigration rather than a destination for immigrants, with the important exception of arrivals from elsewhere in the British Isles. But both in earlier times and especially in the twentieth century, women with foreign-born parents have made their lives wholly or partly in Scotland. Agnes Yewande Savage (1904–1964) was born in Edinburgh to Nigerian and Scottish parents, qualified as a doctor there in 1929, and then spent most of her career in key roles in West Africa – while facing racial discrimination from the Colonial Office. The pioneering artist Pamela Hung So grew up in one of the first three Chinese families in Glasgow, and her work explored Scottish Chinese heritage and culture. The vision of photographer and activist Maud Sulter, of Scottish and Ghanaian descent, analysed the inequalities facing black women’s creativity. Ukrainian-born tennis-player Elena Baltacha spent the formative years of her short life in Scotland. As in the original Dictionary, our aim has been to make available to the general reader information not easily found elsewhere about individual women in the Scottish historical landscape. Some of them are literally heroines; others have more doubtful reputations; all have marked Scottish life in some way. As before, the thematic index (greatly expanded here) enables readers to trace particular areas of interest, from archaeology – via fishing, Gaelic culture, gardening, law, literature, music, photography, politics, sport, travel, and many other headings – to zoology.5 In its composition, this new Dictionary has been paralleled by a similarly wide-ranging project undertaken since 2012 by Women’s History Scotland, the Glasgow Women’s Library, and Girlguiding Scotland: Mapping Memorials to Women in Scotland. This online enterprise aims to

locate and list any memorials to women (statues, plaques, tablets) from all over Scotland. By namechecking the Memorials website, womenofscotland.org.uk/memorials, more information may be found about many women included in the Dictionary. There are also now women’s history trails in several Scottish cities. The New Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women is being published in 2018, a year marking a significant centenary for women in Scotland and throughout the United Kingdom. The 1918 Acts of Parliament for the first time granted to a limited number of British women the right to vote and to be elected to parliament: these rights applied initially only to women over 30 with property qualifications (about eight million individuals). It was another ten years before, in 1928, women were finally entitled to vote on the same terms as men. This reminds us that in the historical landscape there is always movement; rights usually have to be fought for and, once achieved, protected. One aspect of this is to continue to record the names of those individual women who have made a difference, and whom many history books and popular lists of ‘Great Scots’ have, in the past, ignored. This dictionary includes entries on over 1,000 such women. They represent but cannot speak for all those women who were essential to the economy, society, politics and culture of Scotland, and whose names and stories are still to be discovered, like the Dundee ropeworkers on our cover.

Notes 1. See the entry on Sue Innes. 2. In addition to other works, see the website Women in Scottish History (WISH), www.womeninscottishhistory. org, for a regularly updated bibliography of research on Scottish women. 3. Updated versions of some of those entries now figure in the online edition. 4. For example, in 2015, a considerable boost to the profile of Scottish women artists was provided by the National Galleries of Scotland’s exhibition Modern Scottish Women: painters and sculptors 1885–1965, curated by Alice Strang. The catalogue from the exhibition figures (as MSW) in the bibliography for several entries here. 5. In common with some other reference works and in the interests of copyright protection, this volume contains one easily identified spoof entry.

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Introduction to The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women (2006) I Why a biographical dictionary of Scottish women? It’s a legitimate question, and it has several answers. The shortest one is that it aims to provide accurate, readable and stimulating information, not readily available anywhere else – despite the otherwise impressive amount of Scottish historical writing in recent years. But a dictionary with this title also makes larger claims. It should both contribute to ‘a statement of national identity’, and be ‘a stay against oblivion’, a memorial ‘designed to stir thoughts on fame and obscurity, on mortality and immortality’.1 It is the contention of the editors, shared we imagine by our contributors, that Scottish national identity has so far been largely construed in terms of the recorded achievements of men. Oblivion and obscurity was often the historical fate of women. There are various reasons why this was so in the past; at least part of the explanation was a lack of knowledge. But scholarship has moved on. Much more is now known about the women who have, in every thinkable way, contributed to the Scottish nation and its identity, and more than 1,000 of their names appear in the following pages. The detailed thinking behind this dictionary is addressed at greater length in part II below. But readers consulting biographical dictionaries often prefer to skip the introduction and plunge straight in to the entries themselves. So we have started with an answer to the question every reader will probably want to ask (who’s in, who’s out?), by stating the criteria for inclusion and an explanation of nomenclature, before offering a more general essay, to which readers may return at leisure. See the Readers’ Guide above for quick reference. Criteria for inclusion No living persons have been included. This was the only non-negotiable criterion for selection. We have, though, included a few quasi-historical figures whose claim to have been ‘living’ at all could be questioned (see for example Braidefute, Marion). Secondly, while virtually all the entries are indeed on women, one or two subjects are

strictly speaking ‘girls’ (see Fleming, Marjory), and there is at least one case of disputed sexual identity (see Barry, James). Thirdly, the chronological range covered by the dictionary runs from the earliest records, taken to be Roman Britain, until a date of death before January 2005. Fourthly, geographically, while the great bulk of entries assume a Scotland within its present-day borders, some of those on early women relate to the area covered by the kingdoms of Northumbria/Bernicia, which included large parts of southern Scotland in the seventh and eighth centuries. The criterion on which the editors have exercised most flexibility, but which has occasioned most discussion, is of course Scottishness. We have tried to be generous in our application of the term, within the limited scope of this single-volume dictionary. Broadly, to be included an individual should have been born in Scotland; or have lived in Scotland for an appreciable period; or have influenced some aspect of Scottish national life. Being born outside Scotland to Scottish parents was not regarded as qualification enough, unless the woman concerned met one of the other two criteria. (We should otherwise have had to include an impossibly huge number of persons who may certainly have thought of themselves as Scottish.) On the other hand, we have included a representative sample of women born in Scotland, but who made their mark as part of the ‘Scottish diaspora’ in Africa, Australasia, India, North America and other regions of the world – another potentially large group. We wanted to have a fairly open approach, in order to indicate that Scotland has not been a closed society: it has been alive to many influences from across the border and across the seas, and vice versa. At the same time, we felt that there was a strong case for the dictionary to confine itself to a defensible version of Scottishness, since existing dictionaries about ‘British women’ contained comparatively few Scottish names. As Sue Innes has put it, Scottish women have been doubly marginalised, in Scottish history because of their sex, in British history because of their nationality. 2 But this is not a Women’s Who’s Who of Scottish History, in that ‘fame’ has not been a key

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criterion. If all the women listed here are in some sense Scottish, they are not necessarily celebrated. Some of the entries, especially from the early period, are on renowned historical figures; others are on women who will be reasonably well known to specialists within their fields of activity (art, literature, sport, science, suffrage, politics, for example). But many names will not be familiar to the average reader, or even to the specialist. They can all however claim to have made some impact – ­sometimes surprising and not necessarily positive – on national life, on Scottish society, economy, politics or culture, and in virtually all cases to have been known outside their immediate circle. For further discussion of the groups included, see Section II. Nomenclature The problem of nomenclature has been briefly outlined in the Readers’ Guide. It is worth remarking on from the outset. The entries in this dictionary are listed alphabetically. But editors of books on women have to make decisions not usually faced by those dealing with men: under which name should they be listed? In Scotland, it was generally customary in the past for a woman to retain her family or ‘maiden’ name after marriage. This applied equally to the aristocracy, where a woman would take her husband’s title (e.g. Duchess of Gordon) but might retain her own family name (see Maxwell, Jane). In the nineteenth and the twentieth centuries, however, it became more widespread to adopt the husband’s surname, although writers and artists often kept their names professionally. And some women married more than once, being known by several surnames in turn. In the present day, practice is once more changing, but that has affected relatively few entries. The approach taken by the editors to this question is as follows. Women living before about 1750 are listed under the family name they had at birth, unless there is a strong reason not to do so. Royalty, in whatever century, is generally listed by first name, e.g. ‘Mary, Queen of Scots’. Most women whose surname was a patronymic, which applies to many Gaelic names, are also listed under their first name, e.g. ‘Catriona nic Fherghais’. For those who lived later, entries are normally listed under the name by which the subject was best known. For married women, this has usually meant providing an alternative surname, prefixed either by ‘n.’ = née; or ‘m.’ = married. (Examples: Greenlees, Allison, n. Cargill; Rae, Jane, m. Coates.) The spouse’s name, with dates, is provided, whenever this information

is known – a practice we would like to see more widely used (that is to list the wives of male subjects in reference works). In a few cases, not specific to dictionaries of women, the best-known name may be a pseudonym (e.g. ‘Wendy Wood’). We have made generous use of cross-references, both in the main text and in the index, to help resolve any ambiguities. For further practical aids to reading this dictionary and following up the sources, see the Readers’ Guide above.

II Why is this dictionary needed? Its starting point was the renewal of the study of Scotland’s history and culture in recent years, occasioned at least in part by the dynamic of devolution. Students of Scottish life and culture have reason to be grateful to those historians and publishers who have contributed to what can be called without exaggeration a renaissance in the study of this comparatively small nation.3 But the very existence of these works has revealed gaps and silences in the record, and many of these concern the question of gender. Not so very long ago, Clifford Hanley could describe the stereotypical portrait of the Scots as follows: The Scots are tall, rugged people who live in the mountain fastness of their native land, on a diet of oatmeal, porridge and whisky. They wear kilts of a tartan weave, play a deafening instrument called the bagpipes, are immediately hospitable but cautious with money…They are sparing with words, but when they speak they speak the truth. When they leave their native land they immediately rise to the top in other people’s industries and ­professions.4

This passage has been much quoted as a parody or caricature, but its gendered assumptions are rarely remarked. In common with most national stereotypes, it is based on an unspoken male identity. In the past, and until very recently, the history of Scotland has been largely written by men and has chiefly concerned the doings of men, in what were often apparently all-male contexts: battles, churches, trade unions, formal politics, sport. The ‘new histories’, however, have often had the explicit aim of ‘debunking many national myths and stereotypes’,5 and modern gender-conscious historians of Scotland have indubitably made strenuous efforts to include women in their histories. Consult

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the index of any recent general history and there will be a heading ‘women’: its references will be far more wide-ranging than was once the case, and a respectable number of pages, paragraphs, and indeed whole chapters will be devoted to ‘women’.6 This development is to be welcomed, as a start on what is really an immense programme of historical recovery: releasing the hidden past of women in Scotland. It is clear though, after a closer look, that sections on women are obliged to rely on a comparatively small body of research, mostly published since the late 1980s, when T. C. Smout commented that ‘the history of the family and of child upbringing and the place of the woman within and without the home, is so neglected in Scotland as to verge on becoming a historiographical disgrace’.7 A later writer agreed with him about the neglect, but pointed out that mention of Scottish women’s past ‘has [indeed] tended to be in their capacity as wives and mothers, not as women in their own right’.8 One could enlarge on that remark to say that despite the appearance of more evidence, even the most inclusive approaches have often been obliged to deal in generalities. ‘Women’ have frequently been treated in groups, rather than representing a broad range of human experience. Their history has a tendency to be told collectively, in terms of assumptions about motherhood and exclusions from most other spheres of life: from the churches, from military matters, from politics, from education, from property-owning, from employment, from proper wages. ‘The introduction of female spinners to the Broomyard Mill in Glasgow in 1819–20 led to men burning it down’; ‘public education was largely male-dominated and orientated’; ‘as they were excluded from universities, girls normally did not learn Latin or mathematics’; ‘job opportunities were limited for young women’; ‘males had a vice-like grip on the learned professions’; ‘women were once more subordinate: sexually, occupationally and socially’. Occasionally, again as an undifferentiated group, they are awarded merit points: ‘women, now on the bench for the first time, managed a tough fight with credit’.9 Women are not ignored by the new Scottish history then, far from it: and present-day historians are often keen to demonstrate sympathy for women’s rights, and where possible to find positive aspects of women’s lives to comment on. Yet women do not often emerge from recent historical writing as complex individuals. Very few named

women figure in the indexes of general narratives, cultural surveys or monographs on Scottish history. We know quite a lot about named men, remarkably little about named women. This is, if anything, a phenomenon even more marked in popular histories or collections, let alone newspaper articles on ‘Great Scots’.10 We can agree that there are plausible explanations for laying stress on what women did not do, rather than on what they did: history in Scotland, as in most other countries, is full of examples of discrimination and segregation, and the impact of feminist history over the last thirty years has meant that this is now widely recognised (for instance in the debate over ‘the lad of pairts’). But with a greater awareness of gender in historical studies, have come calls for more research. It has been an aim of the Scottish Women’s History Network (renamed Women’s History Scotland in 2005), from which the dictionary project emerged, to take a fresh look at the past of Scottish women, across all periods, regions, conditions and disciplines. One way of doing this is to re-people the Scottish landscape with more women than the few famous figures of whom everyone has heard. Another initiative from the same association is represented by a companion volume, the collection of essays on Gender in Scottish History since 1700 (EUP, 2006), which takes a more analytical approach, considering how gender has helped shape the nation’s history.11 For whatever reason, as Smout suggested, Scotland has rather lagged behind England, France, Canada and Australia – to take countries with which Scots have had historic links – in producing detailed and plentiful research into the past of its women. The record of publication, though now expanding out of all recognition compared with thirty years ago, is still somewhat patchy – dependent often on the initiative of individuals, who were in the past mostly outside mainstream university history departments.12 The wealth of monographs published elsewhere is still only emerging in Scotland. Pioneering books in other disciplines – on Scottish women writers, or visual artists for example – have set out a promising agenda, and their findings are reflected in this dictionary.13 But in historical studies, authors have sometimes had to make bricks without straw. The two chief publications on the women’s suffrage movement in Scotland, for example, were handicapped by a lack of biographical information about even the most important figures.14 And the more work has xl

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been done, the more obvious it has become that most existing reference works are of little help in women’s history. Biographical dictionaries in general, and certainly those devoted to Scotland, contain comparatively few women’s names. This book therefore sets out to meet a perceived need for accurate, detailed biographical data. If information about Scottish women is needed, why choose the form of a dictionary? The writing of biography, of an individual life story, has sometimes had a bad press with historians, although it has always attracted the general reader. Most academic historians in recent times have preferred to research broader social movements, longer timescales than a lifetime, or case studies of industries, towns or activities. There has, however, been some new-found respect for the perspective biographical studies can bring. The individual lifestory can bring to light aspects of a period which broader surveys miss or neglect. Prosopography – the collective biography of an identified group, from teachers to folksingers to trade unionists – can enlarge this kind of insight on to a broader stage, in turn highlighting features not previously evident.15 To take this one step further, to prepare a biographical dictionary, is to opt for a certain method of organising knowledge, not the only one, but a scheme which is readily accessible. In recent years, there has been a spate of such dictionaries, often of ‘minority’ interests of groups: sportsmen and women, politicians, musicians. Most impressive of all is the new Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2004) for which many of our own contributors have written entries. This is the place to say that our relation with the ODNB has been something of remarkable value. The editors of that huge work – 55,000 entries, 10,000 contributors, 62 million words, an investment of over £20 million – have made a special effort to include more entries on women. In the original DNB, edited by Leslie Stephen, women made up 5% of the entries. The percentage is still only 10% in the new ODNB, but that represents a large increase in absolute numbers. Two of the editors of The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women were themselves contributors to the new version, and some of our authors too have written entries for both reference works on the same individuals. On the other hand it was somewhat daunting to know that we were preparing our work in the shadow of such a mighty publication. In the end, we have come to see it as a great bonus. Approximately 40% of the subjects in

the present dictionary – mostly the better-known ones – also have entries in the ODNB, which are of course longer, and constitute a further source of information for readers, extending the reach of this work. Virtually all the entries in the present work were already written before the publication of the ODNB. We have routinely included it as a reference in such cases, and checked and cross-checked our information with it – not always finding this to be identical. One difference, for example, is that our contributors have often had more to say on Scottish affairs. The comprehensive information available in the ODNB is greatly valued by scholars, as an hour sitting in any reference library will confirm. But a smaller biographical dictionary does something different, offering a form of reference to a wider public. This book provides a single-volume collection of findings about Scottish women, so that entries can be compared and followed through, creating a cumulative sense of women’s participation in Scottish life. It can sit on a bookshelf and be quickly consulted. No specialist knowledge is needed to decipher a biographical entry. It is, as well, a way of bringing together the scattered knowledge held by a large number of individuals, men and women. One attraction of the work has been that the editors could call on the interests, expertise and passions of people from all over Scotland and beyond, some within Women’s History Scotland, many outside it. Some are specialists on a century or a field of interest; others are local historians, or have unearthed details of the life of a particular figure. The contributors – listed on p. x – include members of staff and postgraduates from all the Scottish universities, from the four largest cities and all the regions of Scotland, but also from the rest of the UK, from Ireland, from across the Atlantic and the Pacific, and from a wide range of disciplines. Contributions have come from archivists and librarians, museum curators and art historians, and from experts on everything from architecture to zoology: a total of 277 authors. These authors had first to be found. The project has been a long time in the making. When Edinburgh University Press commissioned this work in 2001, the editorial team was composed of three academic editors, and the indispensable co-ordinating editor, Rose Pipes, who has had the huge responsibility of holding the project together. An advisory group, made up of experts on particular periods or fields in Scottish history and culture, was recruited (see acknowledgements). With their xli

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help, the draft head-list, based on existing reference works, was refined and expanded, and authors were approached. As time went by, more suggestions were considered, and the final volume contains entries on some 820 women, with another 200 or more cited as co-subjects. We wanted to balance the inclusion of as wide a range of lives as possible with the need to provide enough information about each to be meaningful. The longest entries are about 800 words long; many are between 300 to 400 words, and some are shorter still. Length of an entry does not always equate with importance: in some cases, it means that little is known about the subject, in others it may reflect the discovery of data about a previously obscure figure. Some entries on well-known women are short, since the information is readily available elsewhere; and some on less-known women are longer, since they provide less accessible data. The editors had many animated discussions about coverage versus length of entry. As readers will know from the dedication and acknowledgements, our editorial colleague, Sue Innes, died in 2005, as the project was nearing completion. It was her strongly held desire that these biographies should tell not just of careers, but of lives. We have tried to be faithful to that guiding principle. What then is the scope of this dictionary? It would be illusory to think that a book of this kind can achieve ‘balance’, be truly representative of every age and category of the inhabitants of even a country as small as Scotland. We found, predictably, that the amount of detailed knowledge about women is more plentiful for later than for earlier periods. We nevertheless set out consciously to include as many documented women from medieval and early modern Scotland as was readily possible, although they are fewer proportionately than their successors in later centuries. We have also tried to ensure that our geographical coverage is not concentrated in the Central Belt, despite the greater literacy and economic prosperity to be found in this largely urban region, and especially in modern Glasgow and Edinburgh. Urban women, for obvious reasons, may have had more visible lives, but we have made a deliberate effort to cover all the mainland regions and most of the islands of Scotland. Given these preoccupations, who would be included? While we have tried to correct some potential imbalances (chronology and geography are only two examples) the selection in the end

reflects the present state of research. It could have been far larger – the editors have a backfile of literally hundreds of names of women who could not be included in a book this size. Most of the entries in practice fall into one of several broad categories, briefly outlined here. (For a more detailed guide to categories of activity, see the Thematic Index, pp. 470 ff.) The first is of those women who are famous, eminent, celebrated, known about – a relatively small group of ‘stars’, whose inclusion would be expected by most readers, and who have been well studied by historians. Mary, Queen of Scots, probably heads anyone’s list of famous Scotswomen, but this category also includes some well-known women whose Scottish identity is not so obvious, and may come as a surprise – Marie Stopes and Rebecca West (Cecily Fairfield) for example. And it includes one or two famous women whose ‘Scottishness’ may be controversial: the most famous example is perhaps Queen Victoria, included for her passionate attachment to and frequent residence in the Highlands. A similar group – but not necessarily household names – is composed of eminent and elite women, especially in the early period. Queens and aristocrats born into positions of power were the only women whose lives were noted in any detail in the contemporary records, which focused on politics and religion. Even then, such women might often be accorded only a single sentence in a chronicle. Surprisingly little is known even of queens: their birthplaces, places of death and sometimes even their parents are not recorded. The lack of personal documents from early centuries, such as diaries or letters, means we have little insight into their lives. Entries on these women are often short, not because they were unimportant, but because the record is lost. Some of the best-known women in history on the other hand, are famous more for what they were – in dynastic politics for instance, and/or as wives, lovers or relations of famous men – than for what they did (see for example Stewart, Margaret, of Ochiltree). Others are known about because of what was done to them: to call them victims may not be exactly right, but we have detailed records of a number of ‘wise women’ or ‘witches’ as they were variously known, who were the subjects of speculation or persecution, a key episode in Scottish history. The witchcraft episode was not unrelated to religious beliefs, and Scottish history has been marked by times of religious fervour and sectarian xlii

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division. Recent research has uncovered far more knowledge about the experience, both active and passive, of named women in the religious sphere: the dictionary contains examples across a wide range of mostly Christian beliefs: Covenanting women, evangelical preachers, Presbyterians and Catholics, and, especially, expatriate missionaries. One group of women, never entirely neglected, but receiving more attention in recent years, is what we have called the tradition-bearers: women who sang, or composed, or who passed on the traditional heritage of Scottish poems, ballads and songs. If Edwin Muir could write that while ‘the greatest poetry of most countries has been written by the educated middle and upper classes; the greatest poetry of Scotland has come from the people’,16 this was what he meant. While most collectors of traditions have been men, (not all, and we have some collectors here) their informants appear most often to have been women, who acted both as creators of and a repository for ancient music, folktales and poetry. A further very large category is broadly covered by the term ‘women of achievement’: women whose names are known in some context – science or medicine for example – without their necessarily being household names. Mary Somerville, the nineteenth-century ‘queen of science’ is a good example. Here we have deliberately sought out fields of activity, from sport to opera, medicine to embroidery, gardening to cinema, and aimed to include women whose lives have contributed something within that field. Such women in some sense had ‘careers’ – and they are unsurprisingly concentrated in the later periods, especially the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, as opportunities opened up to them. But there are examples of women writers and artists from earlier times: such as the fifteenth-century countess of Argyll, or the calligrapher Esther Inglis. Because the study of Scottish literature has been so enthusiastically renewed in recent years, the number of previously neglected or unknown women writers about whom details are now available has greatly increased. The same is true to a lesser extent of visual artists, and these two groups account for many entries, directly reflecting the present stage of research (see for example Traquair, Phoebe). There are plenty of examples of male artists whose reputations have faded after their death, to be resurrected when, for one reason or another, their work touched something in later generations. This trajectory is often even more true of women.

But in case the term achievement should suggest that only ‘good achievers’ are included in the dictionary, it is worth pointing out that a nation’s history is made up of all kinds of people, and that no purpose is served by hagiography. While there are several saints in these pages, there are not a few sinners, and in general, contributors have included references to criticisms, justified or otherwise, that could be made of individuals, both in their time and later. Women’s transgressions may have tended to fall into different patterns from those of men, because of their circumstances, but some of those listed in these pages called down condemnation on their heads. It is difficult to operate in the political arena without attracting criticism from some quarter, and a further broad category of entries is covered by the word ‘political campaigner’. No one is in danger of forgetting the fight for the vote, which is studied today in schools, but the individuals who carried the women’s suffrage campaign forward in Scotland are much less well known than the ‘stars’ of the British movement, such as the Pankhursts. Yet the Scottish suffrage supporters, from the militant Ethel Moorhead and the flamboyant ‘General’ Flora Drummond, to the suffragettes’ doctor Grace Cadell, or the demurely-dressed but far from demure housemaid Jessie Stephen, were not the least important or controversial figures in the British movement as a whole. Some women, well known for other activities, were also firm supporters of the suffrage cause; Dr Elsie Inglis, the founder of the Scottish Women’s Hospitals in the First World War, is one such case. That War itself gave rise to another episode of struggle, the Rent Strike on Clydeside, which made known to many the names of Helen Crawfurd, Agnes Dollan and Mary Barbour. The strength of the Independent Labour Party in Scotland – known for its support of women’s rights – has yielded a number of women active in twentieth-century left-wing politics, as has the Scottish Co-operative Women’s Guild, which had a membership of many thousands. But the dictionary covers all shades of opinion, including Unionist politics, and gives examples of women who vehemently opposed women’s suffrage, as well as women who participated, less formally but sometimes to effect, in politics in earlier times; some women are known to have held local public office between the fourteenth and eighteenth centuries. Lastly, mention should be made of two groups not usually included in such dictionaries. There is xliii

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a (very small) group of entries on quasi-historical, mythical or fictional women. They are included because, after consultation with our advisers, the editors considered that they had a special place in the remembered Scottish past. Some of them are figures for whom exact identification seems to be lacking; such is the case of Jenny Geddes; others are quite mythical, such as Scota. One example of a woman for whom the only evidence is literary is Marion Braidfute (imaginatively credited with being the sweetheart of William Wallace); another, in a quite different vein, is Maw Broon, whose portrait has undoubtedly had some impact on the image of Scottish womanhood. On the other hand, one or two real women have been included because they inspired famous fictional portraits (see Helen Walker, a possible model for Jeanie Deans; and Christina Kay, the teacher who inspired the figure of Miss Jean Brodie) There is one category which will not appear in most reference works of this kind. The editors particularly wanted to include some documented lives of women who were not remotely famous, but whose story in some way represented areas of Scottish life or economy, where women were generally present but rarely individually recorded. Entries were therefore commissioned on a range of occupations and professions in Scotland, across the ages, in which women are known to have played a significant part. Inevitably, these mostly date from close to our own time, since there are few detailed sources on ordinary women before about the eighteenth century. The proviso was that enough documentation was available to provide a real life story. These include, for example, a Borders bondager, an East Coast fishwife, a herring gutter, a coalminer, a shepherd, a jute weaver, a Shetland knitter, a prison warder, a prostitute, a printing compositor, as well as several types of teachers, nurses, midwives, engineers and farmers, and at least one example of ‘all those small-town women who through their energy keep many a community running’ (see Hastie, Annie). These subjects are listed in the index under their field of activity. There are many individuals in the dictionary who do not fit easily into any of these categories, and one of the overall aims of the book, as noted above, was to provide a variety of examples of ‘brief lives’, rather than lists of achievements. How, after all, would one pigeonhole the Shetland woman who survived a lone sea-voyage, the first woman to accompany her fur-trapper husband to the north of Canada, the pioneer of girl guiding in Scotland,

the aristocratic founder of the Soil Association, the spy, or the collector of fossils? We hope that readers will make discoveries all the time as they browse, following up cross-references or simply dipping in at random. But it would be entirely illusory to think that the dictionary as a whole could, at a stroke, fill the void in the historical study of Scottish women left by so many years of inadvertent neglect or wilful avoidance. We are well aware of gaps and omissions, and hope that future research will take this work further. With a view to this ongoing research, we have done as much as possible to help further enquiries. For example, we have provided full dates and places of birth and death and parents’ names, wherever this information has been findable in the Scottish (and sometimes British or overseas) records. In so doing, we have made many discoveries about the inter-relatedness of subjects, and hope also to have provided useful genealogical material. In particular, we have tried to find the names of subjects’ mothers, who are often buried under the patronymic dominance of father’s names. Secondly, it has been one of the priorities of the editors to ask that every entry be accompanied by a note of accessible source materials, which would enable readers to find out more. These sections list primary sources and archive collections, as well as recent secondary works. We have also relied in turn on a number of invaluable reference books, which are cited so often that we have adopted abbreviations for them (see above) and where readers will often find bibliographies. For further aids, see the Readers’ Guide above. In 1984, an article in the magazine Cencrastus called for ‘a collective effort to uncover the social and cultural history of women in Scotland’.17 This project aims to make a start in that direction, and to show how mistaken Hugh MacDiarmid was in his belief that ‘Scottish women of any historical importance or interest are curiously rare’.18 But it is more than that: by showing the detail of so many women’s lives, across several centuries, it provides a new way of picturing Scottish life, and a rethinking of what is meant by Scottish national identity.

NOTES 1. S. Collini, ‘Our Island Story’, London Review of Books, 20 Jan. 2005, review of the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2004). 2. See S. Innes, ‘Reputations and remembering: work on the first biographical dictionary of Scottish

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1995, sponsored by W. A. Baxter & Sons). The author, who is aware of a gap in the story, suggests ‘that there are no women in our lists’ because Scottish education was ‘entirely concentrated on male children’, p. 15. We hope this book may help to dispel that impression (see also Baxter, Ethel). Cf. articles such as the ‘Top 100 Scots’, Scotland on Sunday, 25 August 2002, in which three women made the cut: St Margaret, Mary Slessor and Elsie Inglis. 11. Women’s History Scotland, as it now is, brings together historians, both women and men, interested in furthering research into women’s and gender history, in Scotland and other societies (www.womenshistoryscotland.org). Gender in Scottish History since 1700, edited by L. Abrams, E. Gordon, D. Simonton and E. Yeo, is published by EUP (2006). 12. For some early titles in the history of Scottish women, see Innes, ‘Reputations and remembering’ (see note 2 above); the new wave of historical writing can be said to have started with E. King’s The Scottish Women’s Suffrage Movement (Glasgow, The People’s Palace, 1978); R. Marshall’s Virgins and Viragoes: a history of Scottish women from 1080 to 1980 (Collins, 1983); and Glasgow Women’s Studies Group, Uncharted Lives (Pressgang, 1983). These were followed by several edited collections: E. Breitenbach and E. Gordon’s two on the modern period: The World is Ill-Divided and Out of Bounds, both published by Edinburgh University Press (1990 and 1992), and E. Ewan and M. Meikle’s collection Women in Scotland c.1100–c.1750 on the earlier period (Tuckwell, 1999). It is notable that though most recent work has been done by women, these three collections also include chapters by male historians. Space prevents listing the many more monographic works which have appeared in the 1990s and since: see the bibliographical chapters by E. Ewan and J. McDermid in T. Brotherstone, D. Simonton and O. Walsh (eds) Gendering Scottish history (Cruithne, 1999), and see the website www.uoguelph. ca/wish 13. See for example D. Gifford and D. McMillan (eds) A History of Women’s Writing in Scotland (EUP, 1997); J. Burkhauser (ed.) Glasgow Girls: women in art and design 1880–1920 (Canongate, 1990); S. Dunnigan et al. (eds) Woman and the Feminine in Medieval and Early Modern Scottish Writing (Palgrave, 2004). 14. E. King, The Scottish Women’s Suffrage Movement and L. Leneman, A Guid Cause (published in 1991, updated 1995, Mercat Press). 15. See for example J. Uglow, The Lunar Men: the friends who made the future (Faber, 2002); it could be argued that several books on the Scottish Enlightenment take this approach. An alternative is to select figures across historical periods, as W. W. J. Knox does in his edited

women’, Études Écossaises, no. 9, 2003–4, pp. 11–26, p. 15. Abridged versions of this article, which gives details of the genesis of this book, are published in Scottish Economic and Social History 23, 1, 2003, and Scottish Studies Review, 6, 1, Spring 2005, edited by M. Palmer McCulloch and M. G. H. Pittock. Older biographical dictionaries of Scotland contain very few women. Modern works have made more of an effort, while still concentrating on ‘pre-eminent personalities’: K. Roy (ed.) Dictionary of Scottish Biography, vol. I (1971–5) (Irvine Carrick Media, 1999), p. 5. See also R. Goring (ed.) The Chambers Scottish Biographical Dictionary (Chambers, 1992) which includes living persons; A. Crawford (ed.) The Europa Dictionary of British Women, 1983 (revised in 2003 as A Historical Dictionary of British Women), which covers all of Britain in 1,000 entries, so the place of Scottish women is necessarily reduced; and J. Uglow and M. Hendry (eds) Macmillan Dictionary of Women’s Biography (Macmillan, 1998). Both the latter include only very well known Scottish women. 3. Examples of recent one-volume general works covering a long period include: T. M. Devine, The Scottish Nation, 1700–2000 (Allen Lane The Penguin Press, 1999); R. A. Houston and W. W. J. Knox (eds) The New Penguin History of Scotland: from the earliest times to the present day (Allen Lane, 2001); M. Lynch (ed.) The Oxford Companion to Scottish History (OUP, 2001). The latter work contains a very full bibliography, indicating the increased number of publications of all kinds on Scottish history since about the mid-1980s. 4. C. Hanley, The Scots (1980), quoted here from Houston and Knox, The New Penguin History of Scotland, p. xv (see note 3 above). 5. Ibid., back cover. 6. A good example among several is the chapter ‘Scottish Women: family, work and politics’ in Devine, The Scottish Nation (see note 3 above). 7. T. C. Smout, A Century of the Scottish People, 1830–1950 (Collins, 1986, p. 292). 8. Y. Brown, entry on ‘Women’ in Lynch, Oxford Companion, p. 647 (see note 3 above). 9. These examples are all taken from Houston and Knox, New Penguin History of Scotland (see note 3 above), pp. 300, 337, 394, 437, 515 – not in a spirit of criticism, since they clearly indicate an effort to integrate women into a mainstream narrative; but they also illustrate a tendency to see women as a more unified group than men. 10. It can be a dispiriting experience looking for the names of women in the indexes of most general works on Scotland, so no instance is singled out here. A good example of a popular ‘Great Scots’ book is Baxter’s Book of Famous Scots, by B. Fletcher (Lang Syne Publishers,

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collection of chapters on 10 Scottish women, The Lives of Scottish Women: women and Scottish society 1800–1970 (EUP, 2006). 16. Quoted in C. MacDougall, Writing Scotland: how Scotland’s writers shaped the nation (Polygon, 2004), p. 156 (and many other places).

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17. C. Anderson and G. Norquay, ‘Superiorism’, Cencrastus, 15 (1984), pp. 8–10. 18. Hugh MacDiarmid wrote this originally in ‘Elspeth Buchan’, Scottish Eccentrics (Routledge, 1936) and it is often quoted, cf. Innes, ‘Reputations and remembering’, p. 13, n. 3 (see note 2 above).

Jean Armour (Watercolour by Samuel MacKenzie, c. 1820. National Galleries of Scotland)

Georgina Ballantine (Perth Museum and Art Gallery)

Mary Barbour In her bailie robes, c. 1924 (Courtesy of Mary Barbour, grand-daughter)

Lady Anne Barnard (Artist unknown. National Galleries of Scotland)

Margaret Burnley Campbell (Courtesy of the University of St Andrews Library)

Elizabeth Burns (By Johnathan Bean)

Eileen Caddy (Courtesy of The Findhorn Foundation Archives)

Jane Welsh Carlyle (Edinburgh University Library, Special Collections)

Kay Carmichael (Courtesy of David Donnison)

Susan Carnegie (Courtesy of NHS Tayside)

Bessie Craigmyle (From Aberdeen High School for Girls’ magazine, 1933)

Winifred Drinkwater With an open cockpit Avro Cadet aircraft of Midland and Scottish Air Ferries (The Peter V. Clegg Collection via the late Winifred Orange)

Joan Eardley (By Audrey Walker. National Galleries of Scotland)

Mary Esslemont Arriving in the USSR on a BMA visit in 1956 (Courtesy of the University of Aberdeen)

Margaret Ewing (Scottish Political Archive, University of Stirling)

Eliza Fletcher (After John Henning. National Galleries of Scotland)

Barbara Flucker (D. O. Hill and R. Adamson. National Galleries of Scotland)

Elizabeth Gunning, Duchess of Hamilton (By Gavin Hamilton. National Galleries of Scotland)

Jane Haining With some girls from her school on the shores of Lake Balaton in western Hungary (Courtesy of the Church of Scotland)

Maidie Hart (Courtesy of her daughters)

Dorothy Hurd (© Illustrated London News Ltd/Mary Evans)

Isobel Wylie Hutchison In native Greenland dress (From Women in Modern Adventures, by Marjorie H. Tiltman. George Harrap, 1935)

Esther Inglis (Artist unknown. National Galleries of Scotland)

Sue Innes (Courtesy of Jo Clifford)

Hilda Jamieson (Gavin Anderson Photography)

Jessie Jordan (D. C. Thomson & Co. Ltd)

Christina Kay Centre, with the Junior Class at James Gillespie’s Girls’ School, 1903; Muriel Camberg (Spark) is 2nd from right on 3rd row, with Frances Niven (Cowell) sitting on her right

Annas (Agnes) Keith, Countess of Moray and Argyll (Wedding portrait by Hans Eworth, c. 1562. Private collection)

Maggie Keswick At home in London, 1984 (Photographed by her friend Sophie Litchfield; courtesy of Charles Jenks)

Jennie Lee At the time of the Bristol Central by-election, when standing as an Independent Socialist candidate (© Robert Capa/Magnum Photos. National Galleries of Scotland)

Ailsa McKay (Courtesy of Jim Campbell)

Elizabeth MacLennan (left) and Dolina Maclennan Performing in a production of ‘The Cheviot, the Stag and the Black Black Oil’, by 7:84 Theatre Company (By Barry Jones)

Chrystal Macmillan (Courtesy of John Herdman)

Flora MacNeil (By Donald MacLeod)

Kay Matheson Standing behind the Stone of Scone at a ceremony marking its return to Scotland in the Great Hall of Edinburgh Castle, 30 November 1996 (Gary Doak Photography)

Gunnie Moberg Standing beside ‘Curved Form (Trevalgan)’, a sculpture by Barbara Hepworth, on the occasion of the opening of the Pier Arts Centre, Stromness, Orkney, 1979 (Courtesy of Colin MacPhail)

Betty Mouat (Courtesy of Shetland Museum)

Willa Muir (By Nigel McIsaac. National Galleries of Scotland)

Anna Munro (Courtesy of Bob Ashman. With thanks to Margaret Ridgway)

The Neil sisters, Annie (Andy) (left) and Christina (Chrissie) Taken at the finishing line of the 1954 Monte Carlo Rally (Supplied by Candy Munro)

Linda Norgrove Taken on her 21st birthday with Mount Everest in the background: she and her friend Tricia were cycling from Lhasa in Tibet to Kathmandu in Nepal (Courtesy of The Linda Norgrove Foundation)

Annie Quibell (left) (Courtesy of the Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology – UCL Culture)

Jean Redpath (Courtesy of Burt Torchia)

Muriel Robertson (By Walter Stoneman, 1946. © Godfrey Argent Studio)

Elizabeth Ness Ross (Courtesy of Tain Through Time, Tain and District Museum and Clan Ross Centre)

Margery Sampson Seated with fellow bellringers outside Erdington Church (From The Ringing World, 1 August 1913)

Members of the Scottish Women’s Hospital contingent (Elsie Inglis, second left) (Glasgow City Archives)

Margaret Fay Shaw (Courtesy of the estate of Margaret Fay Shaw Campbell)

Pam Skelton (front row, 1st left) and Elizabeth Malloch (front row, 3rd left, with stick) On the occasion of their ordination in St Mary’s Cathedral, Edinburgh, December 1994 – the first time that women were ordained as priests in the Scottish Episcopal Church (PHOTO Express)

Margaret Skinnider (Original source unknown)

Muriel Spark (© Eamon McCabe)

Helen Steven (in centre) At an Assynt Peace Group demonstration at Faslane naval base

Margaret Stewart (on left) (Perth Museum and Art Gallery, Culture Perth and Kinross, Scotland)

Maud Sulter (Maud Sulter, Self-portrait, 2002. © The Estate of Maud Sulter 2017. Reproduced courtesy of the Estate of Maud Sulter)

Mary Symon (With permission of Robert Gordon’s College, Aberdeen)

Margaret Tait (© Gunnie Moberg estate. National Galleries of Scotland)

Susan Trail (Appears in Guthrie, C. K. (ed.) (1902) Genealogy of the Descendants of Rev. Thomas Guthrie, D. D., and Mrs. Anne Burns or Guthrie, p. 119. Courtesy of the National Library of Scotland)

Helen Monro Turner With two glass panels which she engraved (© The Scotsman Publications Ltd)

Merbai Ardesir Vakil (University of Glasgow Archives and Special Collections, Queen Margaret College collection, GB248 DC233/2/22/2/51/1)

Stephanie Wolfe Murray (Courtesy of Gavin Wolfe Murray. Photographer unknown)

Jenny Wormald (Courtesy of Luke Wormald)

Frances Wright (Nagel & Weingaertner Lithography Company, after Johan Gorbitz c. 1852. Lithograph on paper. National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, USA)

THE NEW BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY OF SCOTTISH WOMEN

A ABBOTT, Wilhelmina Hay (Elizabeth), n. Lamond, born Dundee 22 May 1884, died Dunmow, Essex, 17 Oct. 1957. Suffragist and equalitarian feminist. Daughter of Margaret Morrison, and Andrew Lamond, jute manufacturer. Educated in London and Brussels, Wilhelmina Lamond trained as a secretary and accountant 1903–6. She later took the name Elizabeth, and married George F. Abbott, author, in 1911. She had at least one son. From 1909 she was organiser for ENSWS and in 1910 a member of the executive committee of the SFWSS, as well as of the Scottish Committee which produced a Minority Report on Poor Law Reform. From 1916 she was a successful international fundraiser for *Elsie Inglis’s *Scottish Women’s Hospitals, raising £60,000 from India, Australia and New Zealand. In 1920 she became secretary of the IWSA, and edited its paper Ius Suffragii. She represented NUSEC at the International Alliance of Women for Equal Suffrage and Citizenship in 1923. In spring 1927 she acted as spokeswoman for the 11 newly elected executive members who resigned from NUSEC, criticising ‘new feminism’ for turning towards social reform and away from ‘the demand for the removal of every arbitrary impediment that hinders the progress, in any realm of life and work, of women’ (Alberti 1989, p.170). With *Chrystal Macmillan, in 1926 she founded the Open Door Council to press for the abolition of restrictions on women’s right to work, and the Open Door International, after the IWSA refused to commit itself to opposition to all protective legislation in Paris in 1929. She was closely involved with the Association for Moral and Social Hygiene for 40 years; one tribute suggested that ‘most of all she will be remembered for her work in the footsteps of Josephine Butler for the defence of prostitutes’ (The Times, 1957). jr

occupational, social and political rights, hostess. Daughter of Isabella Hogg, and Sir Dudley Coutts Marjoribanks, MP. The youngest of five children, Ishbel Marjoribanks was raised in a strongly Liberal household, to which Gladstone was a frequent visitor. In 1877, following marriage to John Gordon, 7th Earl of Aberdeen (1847–1934), a Gladstonian convert, she moved to Haddo House, Aberdeenshire, where she immediately demonstrated the same zeal for charitable work among women that she had previously displayed among London prostitutes. The Haddo House Club, a local adult education society for the servants of estate tenants, evolved into the Onward and Upward Association, with more than 100 branches throughout Britain and the Empire and a fortnightly magazine, edited by Lady Aberdeen. In 1883, she founded the Aberdeen Ladies’ Union, providing educational and recreational facilities for working girls, as well as a servants’ registry and training home, while the Union’s emigration committee arranged the removal of some 400 women overseas, mainly to domestic service in Canada, up to 1914. In 1886 and from 1906 to 1915, Lady Aberdeen accompanied her husband to Ireland during his two vice-regal terms, and from 1893 to 1898 was resident in Canada during his GovernorGeneralship there. Her own political and charitable endeavours took on an increasingly international dimension. During her first visit to Canada, in 1890, she launched the Winnipeg-based Aberdeen Association to promote the welfare of isolated prairie settlers, particularly women, and her establishment of the Victorian Order of Nurses in 1897 helped to initiate a Dominion-wide health service. In Ireland she launched a successful crusade against tuberculosis, supported village industries, and pioneered a mother-and-child welfare organisation, the Women’s National Health Association of Ireland. A hyperactive philanthropist, she was not afraid to voice her political opinions. Her support for women’s rights, as well as social and educational reform, was demonstrated through her lengthy presidency of the International Council of Women, created in the USA in 1888 to promote the social, economic and political welfare of

• AGC; Alberti, J. (1989) Beyond Suffrage: Feminists in War and Peace, 1914–1928; Law, C. (2000) Women: A Modern Political Dictionary (Bibl.); Leneman, L. (1994) In the Service of Life; The Times, 31 Oct. 1957 (appreciation); WSM. ABERDEEN AND TEMAIR, Ishbel Maria Gordon, Marchioness of, (Lady Aberdeen) [I. M. Gordon], n. Marjoribanks, GBE, born London 14 March

1857, died Aberdeen 18 April 1939. Philanthropist, national and international campaigner for women’s 3

ACQUROFF

women. Not openly suffragist, though many of its members were, the ICW aimed to be a broad umbrella organisation. Lady Aberdeen had never heard of the ICW when she was asked to lead it in 1893, but she ‘stuck to it with a vengeance’, serving until 1936 with two breaks (1899–1904, 1920–22) (Rupp 1997, p. 15). Shortly after taking office, she dispatched her French- and German-speaking private secretary, Teresa Wilson, to Europe to build councils: 14 joined by 1904; 23 by 1914; and 36 by 1939. During the early years, Lady Aberdeen paid for all the organisation’s expenses, ‘finally closing the purse strings out of fear of setting a precedent for future officers’ (ibid., p. 53). At the Paris peace conference (1919), she successfully lobbied for all posts in the League of Nations secretariat to be open to women, and in the 1920s tied the ICW to the League as part of her advocacy of world peace. She was also involved with the Red Cross, and in 1931 was instrumental in securing the ordination of women to the Church of Scotland ministry. The 1938 jubilee of the ICW in Edinburgh saw many tributes to her, and her honours included the freedom of the city (1928). While Lady Aberdeen’s domestic life was centred on Haddo House, the Aberdeens’ public duties required them to take up official residence at Rideau Hall, Ottawa and at Dublin Castle. Buying two ranches in the Okanagan Valley, British Columbia, in the 1890s, they pioneered commercial fruit-farming. In 1920, with the family fortunes embarrassed and the Haddo estate reduced in size, they relinquished their Okanagan properties and retired to the House of Cromar in Aberdeenshire, where they wrote a joint autobiography, We Twa, recording a happy union. After her husband’s death, continuing financial problems obliged Lady Aberdeen to move to Aberdeen. Her life was not without its sorrows: one daughter died in infancy and her youngest son died in 1909, aged 25, in a motor accident. The Aberdeens’ daughter Marjorie married John Sinclair (as Lord Pentland, Scottish Secretary in the Liberal administration 1905–12) and wrote a biography of her mother (Pentland 1952). MDH

nineties, (1936) The Musings of a Scottish Granny. Aberdeen, Lord and Lady [Gordon, J. C. and Gordon, I. M.] (1925) We Twa, 2 vols, (1929) More Cracks with ‘We Twa’; Aberdeen Assn. for the Distribution of Literature to Settlers of the North-West, Annual Reports, 1896–1902. Gibbon, J. M. (1947) The Victorian Order of Nurses for Canada: 50th anniversary, 1897–1947; ODNB (2004) (Gordon, John); Pentland, M. (1952) A Bonnie Fechter; Rupp, L. J. (1997) Worlds of Women; Shackleton, D. French (1988) Ishbel and the Empire; Slater, A. -M. (2014) ‘The Noble Patroness, Lady Aberdeen’, in W. Stephen (ed.) Learning from the Lasses: women of the Patrick Geddes circle, pp. 164–84; Strong-Boag, V. (2015) Liberal Hearts and Coronets: the lives and times of Ishbel Marjoribanks Gordon and John Campbell Gordon, the Aberdeens.

• NRA (Scotland): Survey No. 0055, Haddo House Papers; Provincial Archives of British Columbia, A-1277: Lord Aberdeen Papers pertaining to British Columbia; National Archives of Canada, MG 27, C-1352 1L, 1B5: The Journal of Lady Aberdeen (unpublished). Aberdeen, Lady [Gordon, I. M.] (1893, 1994 intro. Harper, M.) Through Canada with a Kodak, (1896) R. M. Middleton (ed.) The Journal of Lady Aberdeen: the Okanagan Valley in the

ADAM, Helen Douglas,

born Edinburgh 12 Oct. 1831, died Edinburgh 18 Sept. 1887. Pianist, singer, poet, music teacher. Daughter of Sophia Campbell Fletcher, and John Acquroff, hairdresser, of Russian origin. One of 10 children, Helen Acquroff, who was visually impaired from birth, lost her sight entirely during childhood. She attended and later taught at the Blind Asylum School, Edinburgh. Her son James was born in 1862. She remained unmarried. A committed advocate for the Temperance Movement, she performed in concert halls across Scotland, adopting the name ‘Sister Cathedral’, given to her when her address for Glasgow Cathedral was published, warning of the perils of excessive drinking. She was the author of songs, hymns and poems in Scots and English, including The Scourge of the Nation, When We Were Bairns Thegither and The Reformed Drunkard To His Wife. After her death from nephritis, a marble drinking fountain was erected in her memory in The Meadows, by the Independent Order of Good Templars. MFB

ACQUROFF, Helen,

• Acquroff, Sister Helen (1873) Good Templar Songs. Edwards, D. H. (1888) Modern Scottish Poets 11th Series; Boos, F. S. (ed.) (2008) Working-Class Women Poets in Victorian Britain: an anthology.

born Glasgow 2 Dec. 1909, died Brooklyn, New York City, USA, 19 Sept. 1993. Poet, short story writer and dramatist. Daughter of Isabella Douglas Dunn, and William Adam, United Free Church Minister. After attending the University of Edinburgh for two years, Helen Adam worked as a journalist in London. She wrote ballads and later par-

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ADAM ADAM (ADAMS), Jean, born Cartsdyke, Greenock, 28 April 1704, died Glasgow 3 April 1765. Poet and songwriter. Daughter of Jean Eddie, and John Adam, mariner. Jean Adam had an elementary education in reading, writing, and sewing, before entering service at West Kirk manse, Greenock, where she was allowed the run of the library and absorbed English literary classics, Latin poetry in translation and religious works. Later she ran a village school in Cartsdyke. An ex-pupil recalled her as a popular, tender-hearted and unconventional schoolmistress. She read Othello to the class with such feeling that she fainted away at the end, and she sang songs. One song, given as her own composition, was ‘There’s nae luck about the house’, described by Burns as ‘one of the most beautiful songs in the Scots, or any other language’ (Cromek 1810). Jean Adam’s authorship was long contested but is now generally accepted. She was also one of the first Scottish women poets to have a volume of verse printed during her lifetime. Miscellany Poems was published in Glasgow by subscription in 1734, under the anglicised name of Jane Adams. These English poems were written after her enthusiastic discovery of Sidney’s Arcadia. The combination of influences from romance fiction, Milton, Shakespeare and Calvinist theology produced an individual style, forceful and imaginative. The book failed to sell, however, and she sank into poverty. She gave up her school and struggled to survive independently as an itinerant domestic worker, but finally was admitted to a Glasgow workhouse, where she died. kw

ticipated in the Beat Poetry movement. When in 1939 she with her mother and sister, Pat, attended a wedding in America, they were trapped by the war and remained in the States, settling in New York, moving in 1949 to San Francisco where she encountered poets Allen Ginsburg and Robert Duncan. Helen Adam published two collections before she was 16 – The Elfin Pedlar and Tales Told by Pixy Pool (1923) and Charms and Dreams from the Elfin Pedlar’s Pack (1924) – but in later life she spoke disparagingly of these. Over her life she published several collections of poems, and one of short stories, Ghosts and Grinning Shadows (1977). She collaborated with her sister Pat on a verse opera, San Francisco’s Burning, in 1961. In 1965 both sisters moved back to New York. By that time a cult figure, she acted in the film Our Corpses Speak (1981) and her life was the subject of a documentary, Death Magazine (1979), directed by experimental film maker Rosa von Praunheim. After her sister’s death in 1986, she became reclusive until her own death. Helen Adam’s work is still not well known in the UK, although Edwin Morgan has written favourably about it. The American writer Kristin Prevallet continues to proselytise for her work and in 2007 published A Helen Adam Reader. If we take Prevallet’s description of Helen Adam, we can perhaps see why she has never had a secure literary place: ‘Adam primarily wrote supernatural ballads which tell of fatal romances, darkly sadistic sexual affairs, jealous lovers, and vengeful demons’. In photographic collages by Helen Adam arising from these ballads, animating what she called her ‘lethal women’, ‘the true desires of women are fulfilled not by mortal men, but by highly charged encounters with unhuman beings’ (Prevallet, website). The first encounter with these dark poems is thrilling but the repetitiveness of the themes and Adam’s inflexible designs on the readers’ nerves may bring exhaustion. DAM c M

• Adam, J. (1734) Miscellany Poems. By Mrs. Jane Adams in Crawfordsdyke. Cromek, R. H. (ed.) (1810) Select Scotish [sic] Songs, Ancient and Modern, with critical observations and biographical notices, by Robert Burns, 2 vols; Overton, B. (2003) ‘The poems of Jean Adam’, Women’s Writing, 10, 3, pp. 425–52; *ODNB (2004); Rodger, A. (1866) Jean Adam of Cartsdyke ; Tytler, S. and Watson, J. L. (1871) The Songstresses of Scotland, 2 vols; Williamson, G. (1886) Old Greenock from the Earliest Times to the Early Part of the Nineteenth Century.

• State Univ. of New York (SUNY) Buffalo: Helen Adam archive, Poetry/Rare Books Collection. Adam, H., Works as above, and (1929) Shadow of the Moon, (1964) Ballads, (1974) Selected Poems and Ballads. Christensen, P. (1991) ‘Helen Adam’, in Contemporary Poets; Knight, B. (1996) Women of the Beat Generation; Morgan, E. (1999) ‘Scotland and the World’, PN Review, vol. 26, 2, pp. 17–23; Prevallet, K. ‘Helen Adam’s Sweet Company’, Riding the Meridian vol. 2, 2, www.heelstone.com/meridian/ adam4.html, (2007) ‘Introduction’, A Helen Adam Reader; www.scottishpoetrylibrary.org.uk/poetry/poets/helen-adam

ADAM, Mary, n. Robertson, 1699–1761. Correspondent. Daughter of Margaret Mitchell, and William Robertson of Gladney, manufacturer. Mary Robertson married the architect William Adam (1689–1748), her father’s business partner, in 1716 and became the mother of several architect sons, including the celebrated Robert Adam. William later named a colliers’ village which he

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established on his Blair Adam estate Maryburgh in her honour. Through her own family (she was aunt to the noted historian William Robertson) and her marriage, Mary Adam was connected with some of the most brilliant figures of the Scottish Enlightenment. She led a largely domestic life, but in widowhood maintained an extensive correspondence with her son Robert during his travels abroad. She is the subject of a striking portrait by Allan Ramsay, painted in Edinburgh in 1754, now part of Yale University’s Paul Mellon Collection. With her direct and unsentimental gaze, plain black dress and widow’s cap, with spectacles and prayer-book in hand, she is an eloquent reminder of the serious piety of many 18th-century Scottish women. sn

the few working-class women in Parliament, she ‘saw herself as the special representative of such women’ (BDBF (2), p. 5), pressing for higher status and better conditions for working-class wives and mothers at home, arguing that their work bringing up children was undervalued but ‘of the highest national importance’ (8 March 1945, DLabB 1977, p. 3). She also argued for equal pay, for equal ­opportunities for women in industry and the civil service, and for equal compensation for war ­injuries. SI • BDBF (2); DLabB, vol. IV p. 3; ODNB (2004); Who’s Who of British Members of Parliament, vol. IV, 1981. ADLER, Ruth Margaret, n. Oppenheimer, born Ilfracombe, Devon 1 Oct. 1944, died Edinburgh 18 Feb. 1994. Human rights and child welfare campaigner. Daughter of Charlotte Kissinger, lawyer, and Rudolf Oppenheimer, lawyer and importer and exporter of gloves. The child of German Jewish immigrants to Britain in the 1930s, Ruth Oppenheimer grew up in London, one of two children. She was educated at North London Collegiate School and Somerville College, Oxford. She moved to Scotland in the late 1960s with her husband, Michael Adler, and taught philosophy part-time at the University of Edinburgh while their two sons were young. A feminist, she was a founding member of Scottish Women’s Aid in 1974. Pursuing her interest in juvenile justice and welfare, she was a member for eight years of the Lothian Region Children’s Panel. In 1983 she helped to establish the Scottish Child Law Centre and prepared the first comprehensive database of child law in Scotland. She completed a PhD in jurisprudence, published as Taking Juvenile Justice Seriously (1985). She spoke German as a native speaker and translated German legal theory into English in her spare time. From 1987 to 1991 she was assistant to the Lay Observer for Scotland, the legal ombudsman. Towards the end of her life, she became a magistrate and her final area of work allowed her to pursue her interest in human rights, as the first Scottish Development Officer for Amnesty International, from 1991 to 1994. Ruth Adler’s work in a number of areas in social welfare law grew out of her rare energy, a lifelong commitment to human rights and children’s welfare and her conviction that the ethical principles of moral philosophy should be translated into practical action, particularly to support those who were vulnerable. She was the editor of the Edinburgh Star, the journal of the Edinburgh

• NRS: GD18/4754–88, Clerk of Penicuik muniments (Adam Family letters). Gifford, J. (1989) William Adam 1685–1748; Smart, A. (1992) Allan Ramsay, 1713–1784, Plate 19. ADAM SMITH, Janet

see SMITH, Janet (1905–1999)

ADAMSON, Janet Laurel (Jennie), n. Johnston,

born Kilmarnock 9 May 1882, died Bromley 25 April 1962. Labour activist, councillor, MP. Daughter of Elizabeth Denton, dressmaker, and Thomas Johnston, railway porter. Jennie Johnston’s father died young. Her mother supported her six children by dressmaking. Life was hard. Jennie Johnston had some secondary education and worked as a dressmaker, schoolteacher and factory hand. In 1902, she married William (Billy) Murdoch Adamson (1881–1945), a pattern maker and later union official, who became Labour MP for Cannock, Staffordshire, in 1922. They had four children. At first, they moved around northern England and the Midlands in search of work, facing difficulties because of Billy’s political activities. A suffrage supporter, and Labour Party member from 1908, Jennie Adamson’s concern for socialism and the co-operative movement emerged during a period in Lincoln: as a member of the Board of Guardians, she focused on child and maternal welfare, leading the campaign ‘Boots for Bairns’. In 1922, the family moved to London where Jennie Adamson served on the Labour Party NEC (1927–47), chairing it from 1935 to 1936. She was prominent in Labour women’s organisations and a member of LCC (1928–31). She was elected MP for Dartford, Kent (1938–45) then for Bexley, Kent, in 1945, resigning the following year. She also held positions with the Ministry of Pensions. One of 6

AFFRICA (AUFRIKE) OF GALLOWAY

Jewish community, and a stalwart of the Edinburgh Graduate Theatre Group. few

• BEHEP; Colgrave, B. (ed.) (1927) The Life of Bishop Wilfrid; ODNB (2004) (Æthelthryth).

• Adler, R. (1985) Taking Juvenile Justice Seriously. The Scotsman, 20 Feb. 1994 (obit.). Private information.

AELFFLED,

born Bernicia c. 654, died Whitby c. 713. Abbess of Streanaeshalch/Whitby. Daughter of *Eanfled and Oswy, Queen and King of Bernicia. The infant Aelffled was promised to the church ‘in perpetual virginity’ by her father, who ruled over much of northern England and southern Scotland, in thanksgiving for victory over Mercia in 655. Placed in Hartlepool, where her kinswoman Hild was abbess, she moved in 657 with Hild to Whitby, where she became pupil and nun. Her mother Eanfled retired to Whitby in 670. In 680, mother and daughter became co-abbesses; Aelffled continued after Eanfled’s death. Aelffled may have played key roles in resolving two succession crises. In 685, after her brother Ecgfrith’s death (and after she was reminded of the fact), she apparently acknowledged that the potential successor, Aldfrith, whose paternity was disputed, was her brother. Aelffled seems to have helped Aldfrith’s son secure the kingship, and brought the exiled bishop Wilfrid back to Northumbria. She was commemorated as a saint; her feast day was 8 February. jef

AEBBE, (Saint Abb) born Bernicia, died Coldingham c. 683. Abbess of Coldingham. Daughter of AeDilfrith, King of Bernicia (584–616). The daughter of pagans, Aebbe probably converted to Christianity while living in exile among Christian Gaels in the period 616–34. With the restoration of her brothers to the kingship of Bernicia, which included parts of southern Scotland and northern England, Aebbe returned to her home and founded Coludisburg, a ‘double monastery’ (monks and nuns) at St Abb’s Head near Coldingham. Little is known about Aebbe’s career as abbess. She admitted her nephew’s retiring queen *Aeðilthryð to the monastery in 672, played host to various notables, and supported the controversial St Wilfrid. The burning of the monastery shortly after her death was attributed by some to God’s displeasure at its sinfulness, but others were of the opinion that Aebbe had been relatively successful in combating the worst of these sins during her rule. She was commemorated as a saint, with her feast day on 25 August. jef

• BEHEP; Colgrave, B. (ed.) (1927) The Life of Bishop Wilfrid; MacAirt, S. and MacNiocaill, G. (eds) (1984) The Annals of Ulster AU 713.3; ODNB (2004) (Ælffled).

• Bartlett, R. (ed.) (2003) The Miracles of St Æbbe of Coldingham and St Margaret of Scotland; BEHEP; Colgrave, B. (ed.) (1927) The Life of Bishop Wilfrid; ODNB (2004).

fl. 1114–30. Daughter of Elizabeth, illegitimate daughter of Henry I of England, and Fergus of Galloway. Affrica of Galloway is sometimes confused with her descendant, Affreca (fl. 1190), wife of John de Courcy of Ireland. Affrica is believed to have married Olaf, King of Man (r. c. 1114–53), at about the time his reign began. Only one child, Godred, King of Man (r. 1153–87), is known from the marriage, but Olaf had several other children by concubines, including Ragnhild-Rachel-Affrica (fl. 1140), who married Somerled of the Isles. Olaf’s second wife was Ingibjorg Hakonsdatter, of Orkney. Affrica may have died, perhaps as a result of Godred’s birth or a subsequent pregnancy. The Irish Sea marriage market involving all these women from Galloway, Man, the Western and Northern Isles, and eventually Ireland, illustrates the close political and ­economic connections of the Gaelic ‘Irish Sea kingdom’ and its separateness from the Scottish kingdom. SEM

AFFRICA (AUFRIKE) OF GALLOWAY, Queen of Man,

born East Anglia, died Ely, Cambridgeshire, 679. Queen of Bernicia, Abbess of Ely. Daughter of Anna, King of East Anglia. Widowed around 660, AeDilthryD was married to Ecgfrith (645/6–85), son of Oswy, King of Bernicia, whose kingdom included lands in northern England and southern Scotland. According to Bede, AeDilthryD refused to consummate this marriage for twelve years. In 670 Ecgfrith became king; in 672, having donated land for St Wilfrid’s foundation of the monastery of Hexham, Aeðilthryð, with Wilfrid’s support, secured Ecgfrith’s permission to retire to the monastery of Coldingham, founded by Ecgfrith’s aunt *Aebbe. Possibly this story was concocted to facilitate the dissolution of a childless marriage. In 673, AeDilthryD returned to East Anglia to found a monastery at Ely. She was abbess until her death from a tumour. Considered pious, wise and austere, she was commemorated as a saint (feast day 23 June). Her remains were translated into the church at Ely in 695. jef AEðILTHRYð, (Saint Audrey),

• McDonald, R. A. (2000) ‘Rebels Without a Cause? The relations of Fergus of Galloway and Somerled of Argyll with the Scottish kings 1153–1164’, in E. J. Cowan and R. A. McDonald (eds) Alba; Munch, P. A. (ed.) (1874) The

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AINSLIE

in this case rannaigheacht mhór. Her command of the language of classical bardic poetry, married to her strong personal feelings of loss, make this an outstanding example of ‘bardic’ poetry by someone who, because of her sex, was excluded from the formal training given to professional bards. af

Chronicle of Man and the Sudreys, i, pp. 60, 66; SP, iv, pp. 135–7. AINSLIE, Charlotte Edith, OBE, born Edinburgh 15 Feb. 1863, died Edinburgh 24 August 1960. Headmistress. Daughter of Mary Ann Wood, and William Ainslie, pharmaceutical chemist. Charlotte Ainslie attended George Watson’s Ladies’ College (1873–80) and taught and studied in France, Germany and Switzerland before being appointed head of Modern Languages, Dunheved College, Launceston, Cornwall (1889–92). Already LLA, St Andrews (1885), in 1892 she attended Bedford College (Reid Scholar, Gilchrist Scholar), graduating BA in 1895. Posts followed at Skinners’ Company’s School for Girls, London (1896–1901) and at Cambridge Training College (1901–2). In 1902 she was the first woman to be appointed head of an Edinburgh Merchant Company school, on becoming principal of her old school, George Watson’s Ladies’ College, with a roll of 930 pupils and an entirely male senior staff. She remained in post until 1926. Widely regarded as the Scottish expert on the secondary education of girls, Charlotte Ainslie held various committee and governing posts, and published articles on education. She was a member and president (1912–13) of the Secondary Education Association of Scotland, a member of the Scottish Education Reform Committee, and convener of the sub-committee on women’s education. A founding member, committee member and (1921) vice-president of the EWCA, she received Hon LLD Edinburgh (1926) and OBE (1929). lrm

• Kerrigan, C. (1991) An Anthology of Scottish Women Poets, p. 339; Thomson, D. S. (1994) The Companion to Gaelic Scotland, p. 3; Watson, W. J. (1978) Bàrdachd Albannach, pp. 60–4. AITKEN, Margaret, the ‘great witch of Balwearie’, died Fife c. August 1597. Margaret Aitken was the single most important figure in the great Scottish witchcraft panic of 1597. Accused of witchcraft in about April of that year, when the panic was just beginning in Fife, she tried to save herself by claiming an ability to detect other witches by looking for a special mark in their eyes (there were folk beliefs about such marks). In May she claimed knowledge of a convention of 2,300 witches in Atholl. A special commission using special procedures was established to carry her around the country to detect witches: James VI himself took an approving interest. As well as her own testimony, the commission employed the swimming test (in which the water rejected the guilty) – almost the only occasion when this test is known to have been used in Scotland. The number of executions carried out by the commission is unknown but may have run into hundreds; it was active for three or four months. But early in August, a sceptical investigator took some of those whom she had declared guilty, re-presented them to her the next day in different guises, and obtained her statement that they were innocent. The trials ended abruptly. Margaret Aitken was returned to Fife, and executed after declaring that all she had affirmed was false, both about herself and about others. jg

• George Watson’s College Archives: George Watson’s Ladies’ College Collection. Ainslie, C. E. (1911) ‘Domestic science for girls in secondary schools’, The Secondary School Journal, Feb. 1911, pp. 3–5, (1917) ‘The education of girls and the position of women teachers in Scotland’, The School World, 19, March, pp. 87–91. *ODNB (2004); SB; The Scotsman, 11 July 1902 and 16 June 1938.

• Goodare, J. (2002) ‘The Scottish witchcraft panic of 1597’, in J. Goodare (ed.) The Scottish Witch-Hunt in Context. AITKEN, Sarah Ross (Sadie), MBE, born Belhaven 15 July 1905, died Edinburgh 5 Jan. 1985. Theatre activist, manager and producer. Daughter of Lily Birss, and William Aitken, master grocer. By the time Sadie Aitken was seven, the family was living in Edinburgh, where she attended Stockbridge and Broughton schools. Having begun work in a lawyer’s office, she joined the Church of Scotland social services in 1927. A fundraising pageant at Craigmillar Castle brought her to the theatre. She was the first Edinburgh District

fl. 1470. Poet. Wife of Niall Óg Mac Néill, Constable of Castle Sween in Knapdale, Aithbhreac inghean Coirceadail is remembered for her elegy composed to her husband around 1470. The elegy is remarkable on two counts. It is the earliest extant poem by a named female author in Scottish Gaelic, as well as being one of only four extant poems composed by a female author using a classical bardic metre,

AITHBHREAC INGHEAN COIRCEADAIL,

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ALCOCK

Scotland, Alchfled was married in 653 to Peada, King of the Middle Angles and son of the pagan Mercian over-king, Penda, on condition that her husband convert to Christianity. Her brother Alchfrith married Penda’s daughter. Despite these marriages, war between Oswy and Penda followed in 655 and Penda was killed. Alchfled’s husband’s allegiances in this war are demonstrated by the fact that Oswy, in the wake of his triumph, extended Peada’s authority, making him overlord of southern Mercia. Mere months later, around Easter 656, Peada was murdered. Bede reports that Alchfled was accused of betraying him. Nothing else is known of Alchfled, nor why and whether she became involved in the killing of her husband. jef

secretary of the new Scottish Community Drama Association (SCDA), from 1928 until the 1970s, and she occasionally acted in amateur and professional roles. In the 1930s, at the Little Theatre in the Pleasance (then a slum area where her father was a church officer), she developed drama work with young boys, now recognised as pioneering community arts activity. In 1942 she helped found SCDA’s St Andrews Summer School, which continued throughout her lifetime. When the Gateway Theatre in Edinburgh was presented to the Kirk in 1944 she became its manager. It put on films and amateur and professional productions and served as a youth club and multimedia centre. Sadie Aitken’s dynamic management made the venture a success and in 1953 the Gateway Theatre Company was founded. Her wider involvements included, according to Kathleen Gilmour’s account (2004), drawing Robert Kemp’s and Tyrone Guthrie’s attention to the Assembly Hall’s theatrical potential for the historic The Thrie Estaitis Festival production in 1948. With her encouragement, the Kirk Drama Federation flourished from 1950 until demitting its role in the 1980s to the Netherbow Arts Centre. When the Royal Lyceum Company was launched in 1965, the Gateway Company closed. Sadie Aitken retired but continued SCDA work, acting for television and film, frequently managing Edinburgh Festival venues, and working as a critic for the BBC. She was a Queen’s Silver Jubilee Medalist. Her range and deep spiritual commitment justify the description ‘the Caledonian Lilian Baylis’, but solemn she was not. In perhaps ironic deference to the Kirk’s prohibition on serving alcohol in the Gateway, she was said to keep her gin in the safe. ib

• BEHEP.

n. Scott, MBE, born Hampstead, London, 18 August 1874, died Berkshire 31 March 1972. Plant pathologist. Daughter of Edgeworth Leonora Hill, and Sir John Scott, barrister and judicial adviser to the Khedive of Egypt. After education mostly at home, but also in Boston and Egypt, Lilian Scott married Nathaniel H. Alcock in 1905. In 1912 her husband was appointed professor of physiology at McGill University, Montreal. He worked on radiation and died of leukaemia in 1913, leaving her with four children. Returning to London, Lilian Alcock joined the recently formed Plant Pathology Laboratory of the Ministry of Agriculture, at Kew. There were more opportunities for women during wartime, and she acquired expertise in mycology studying with the Director, (later Sir) John Fryer, John Ramsbottom of the BM, and Professor Dame Helen Gwynne-Vaughan, the two latter becoming lifelong friends. Among British pioneers in plant pathology, Lilian Alcock was an early worker on seed pathology. A Fellow of the Linnaean Society (1922), in 1924 she moved to Edinburgh, both for her children’s education and to take up the new post of plant pathologist with the Department of Agriculture and Fisheries in Scotland, at the RBGE. She was the first woman appointed to such a high-level job, one of the aims of which was to increase the level of food production through healthy seeds. Lilian Alcock built up a reputation for providing a quick and practical advisory service in plant pathology, training a succession of assistants who later made their mark in other countries. She herself researched fungal diseases, notably identifying the pathogen affecting strawberries in

ALCOCK, (Nora) Lilian Leppard,

• Gilmour, K. (2000) ‘Sarah (Sadie) Ross Aitken, MBE: a study of a career in theatre’, International Journal of Scottish Theatre, vol. 1, no 2, Dec., pp. 1–23, www.arts.qmuc.ac.uk/ ijost/Volume1_no2_gilmour_g.html, (2004) ‘Sadie Aitken: the “Caledonian Lilian Baylis” ’, in I. Brown (ed.) Journey’s Beginning: the Gateway Theatre building and company, ­1884–1965, pp. 37–52. Interviews with Jean Benedetti; Clive Perry. Private information.

fl. 653–6, born Bernicia. Queen, Middle Anglian kingdom. Daughter of *Raegnmaeld, daughter of Royth, and Oswy, King of Bernicia. The daughter of the Christian rulers of Bernicia, which included parts of southern

ALCHFLED,

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ALEXANDER

Dot Allan was the only child of a prosperous middle-class home in industrial central Scotland. She was educated privately and attended classes at the University of Glasgow. When still a young woman, she moved with her widowed mother to the West End of Glasgow, where she lived for the rest of her life. From there she pursued a successful freelance writing career. It was interrupted twice by nursing and charity work during the two world wars. A keen theatre-goer, she began by writing plays, interviewing Sarah Bernhardt when she visited Glasgow. From the early 1920s, her articles and short stories were published regularly in a wide range of newspapers and ­periodicals. Dot Allan’s first novel, The Syrens (1921), is set in Glasgow, as are several of her ten published novels. The last, Charity Begins at Home, appeared in 1958. Her later work, when she had turned more consistently to historical settings, is less notable, but two earlier novels show considerable originality and power in their critique of contemporary Glasgow society. Makeshift (1928) has as its central character a young woman determined that her life, unlike her mother’s, will not be ‘makeshift’: she will not allow herself to be exploited practically or emotionally. Hunger March (1934) is a treatment of the Depression and the class struggle in Glasgow, pre-dating better-known ‘proletarian’ novels. It strongly criticises the attitude of middleclass women towards waitresses, shop assistants and domestic servants. This recurrent theme in her fiction suggests a developed class and gender awareness. After inheriting money, she gave material help to other writers through Scottish PEN and supported an edition of *Marion Angus’s poems. After the Second World War, although still writing, she gave time to charity work, particularly cancer relief. She died of breast cancer. marb

the Clyde Valley in the 1920s and 1930s. When she retired in 1937, her successor praised her gentle personality, firmness, integrity and wit. During the Second World War, she taught botany to POWs. Lilian Alcock is commemorated by a plaque on the Balfour Building, RBGE. aw • Alcock, N. L. et al. (1930) ‘Strawberry disease in Lanarkshire’, Scot. Jour. Agric., vol. 13, pp. 242–51; Alcock, N. L. and Foister, C. E. (1936) ‘A fungus disease of stored ­potatoes’, Scot. Jour. Agric., vol. 29, pp. 252–57. Botanical Society of Edinburgh News (1973) 10, pp. 10–11; (1972) Bull. Brit. Mycological Soc., p. 8; Desmond, R. (1977) Dictionary of British and Irish Botanists and Horticulturists; (1975) Jour. Kew Guild, 9, 79, p. 342; Smith, W. W. (1970) The Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh 1670–1970. Private information: Miranda Alcock (grand-daughter). ALEXANDER, Helen, born West Linton 1653/4, buried Pentland 10 March 1729. Memoir-writer. Married at 18 to Charles Umpherston (1646–81), tenant in Pentland, Helen Alexander bore three children before being widowed. She was attracted to radical field preachers in the area, including John Welsh and Donald Cargill. In 1679, she lost her land after refusing to attend her parish church where a curate preached, and fell into ever more perilous company. She employed Andrew Guillon, executed in 1683 for his presence at Archbishop Sharp’s assassination. Helen Alexander was imprisoned and might have died for her loyalties but for the intervention of her lord, Sir Alexander Gibson. According to family tradition, he entered for her a forged submission. She later sheltered the minister James Renwick, who in 1687 married her to James Currie (d. after 1729), another memoirist. She and Currie were associated with the Society Folk, radical conventiclers who refused to rejoin the main body of presbyterians in the Church of Scotland. She visited James Renwick in prison, and helped prepare his body for burial after his execution on 17 February 1688. She was distressed by the Treaty of Union. Helen Alexander’s story, taken down near the end of her life, is her testimony to the cause and against contemporary corruption. dm

• Allan, D., Works as above and see HSWW (Bibl.). Burgess, M. (1998) ‘Dot Allan: a Glasgow woman novelist’, ScotLit 19, pp. 1–2; Cruickshank, H. B. (1976) Octobiography, p. 135; HSWW (Bibl.); Kyle, E. ‘Modern women authors 3: Dot Allan’, Scots Observer, 25 June 1931, p. 4; *ODNB (2004). ALLAN, Georgina Armour [Ella Logan], m1 (unknown), m2 Finkelhoffe, born Glasgow

• ODNB (2004); ‘Passages in the lives of Helen Alexander and James Currie, of Pentland’, in D. G. Mullan (ed.) (2003) Women’s Life Writing in Early Modern Scotland.

6 March 1913, died Burlingame, California, USA, 1 May 1969. Singer and entertainer. Daughter of Annabella Macaulay, warehouse worker, and James Allan, spirit salesman. Georgina Allan made her stage debut as a toddler, when she performed songs made famous

ALLAN, Eliza MacNaughton (Dot), born Denny 13 May 1886, died Glasgow 3 Dec. 1964. Novelist. Daughter of Jean Luke, and Alexander Allan, iron merchant.

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by Sir Harry Lauder in music halls across Scotland. Briefly known as ‘Daisy Mars’ and, by her late teens, as ‘Ella Logan’, she was singing with London’s top dance bands, broadcasting on the BBC, and starring in West End revues. In the early 1930s she toured Europe – once apparently singing for a Cologne audience, which included Hitler and several senior Nazis – before moving to the USA where she is believed to have married for the first time. There, she recorded with jazz greats including Benny Goodman. By the late 1930s, her exuberant swing recordings of traditional Scottish songs earned her the names ‘The Swinging Scots Lassie’ or ‘The Loch Lomond Lass’ when she topped the bill in nightclub revues. From 1935, she was based in Hollywood. Just before she left New York, her sister Mary Dalziel Short (May), n. Allan (1901–69), and her family visited from Glasgow. May Allan and her husband Jack Short (1896–1982) had a music hall act, as The Logan Family, featuring their five children, including James Short (actor and comedian Jimmy Logan, 1928–2001) and Annabelle Short (the jazz singer Annie Ross, b. 1930). They believed that Annabelle could be the next Shirley Temple, and they left the five-year-old in her aunt’s care in Hollywood, where Ella Logan was trying to forge a movie career. Between 1936 and 1938 she had minor roles in five films: Flying Hostess (1936), Top of the Town (1937), Woman Chases Man (1937), 52nd Street (1937) and The Goldwyn Follies (1938), in which she introduced two of George Gershwin’s last songs. In 1941, Ella Logan married screenwriter and producer Fred Finkelhoffe, a marriage that raised her status in Hollywood society. After the Second World War, during which she entertained American forces in Italy and in Britain, she enjoyed her greatest triumph playing Sharon, a part written specially for her, in the original 1947 Broadway production of the musical Finian’s Rainbow. Divorced in 1954, she was subsequently romantically linked to several well-known bachelors, including former New York City mayor William O’Dwyer. During the 1950s she worked occasionally in television. In 1955, she returned to Scotland for a high-profile run at the Glasgow Empire and, the following year, she visited Glasgow to perform in jazz legend Louis Armstrong’s show. ak

ALLAN, Janie, born Glasgow 28 March 1868, died Spean Bridge 29 April 1968. Suffragette and socialist. Daughter of Jane Smith, and Alexander Allan, ship owner and merchant. Janie Allan was one of eight children of a wealthy, philanthropic Glasgow shipping family. When her parents married in 1854 they united the Smith family of shipbuilders and the Allan Line and its Canadian sister company, founded by her grandfather and great-grandfather. Janie Allan was a member of the ILP, and from the First World War became active on the SCWT. In her public work, she combined her dedication to socialism and women’s rights, and was editor of the women’s suffrage column for the socialist paper, Forward. From 1902, she was on the executive committee of the GWSAWS. She was one of many women impressed by the charismatic *Teresa BillingtonGreig when she came to Scotland on behalf of the WSPU in 1906, and defected from the GWSAWS to join it in 1909. After the WSPU-WFL split she remained a member of the WSPU but gave financial support to the WFL. Her militant activity included participation in a window-smashing raid that resulted in a four-month sentence in Holloway prison in 1912, a refusal to pay her taxes in 1913, and firing a blank bullet at a policeman who tried to arrest Mrs Pankhurst at St Andrews Halls in March 1914. She was also one of the most important financial supporters of the women’s suffrage campaign. Between 1909 and 1910 she donated £650 to the WSPU, also contributing to the WFL until 1912. In 1914, she gave money to Louisa Garrett Anderson and *Flora Murray to establish the Women’s Hospital Corps. She was described by her contemporaries as ‘tall and handsome’ and a charming presence (Raeburn 1973, p.224). The part she played remains somewhat hidden in studies of the British women’s movement. mks

• Daily Record, 7–14 Oct. 1955; Logan, J. (1998) It’s a Funny Life ; Sudhalter, R. M., sleeve notes for Ella Logan – Swinging Scots Lassie 1932–1941 (Retrieval RTR 79021). Private information: author interview with Annie Ross (2003).

ALLAN, Jean,

• Mitchell Library, Glasgow: Rare Books Collection: 891036/1/1–/1/5 SR 187; GWSAWS executive committee minute books 1902–14; NRS: HH55/336 Letters from Janie Allan; NLS: Acc. 4498 Janie Allan Collection. AGC; Gordon, E. and Nair, G. (2003) Public Lives: women, family and society in Victorian Britain; Raeburn, A. (1974) The Militant Suffragettes; SS.

n. Mackie, born North Ythsie of Tarves, Aberdeenshire, 23 Feb. 1908, died Aberdeenshire 9 April 1991. Educationist and ­practical thinker. Daughter of Mary Yull, and Maitland Mackie, farmer.

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Educated at ‘Miss Oliver’s’ and the University of Aberdeen (MA 1930), Jean Mackie worked as a journalist in London and in adult education in the north of England, before marrying John R. Allan, farmer, writer and broadcaster, in 1934. They had a son, Charlie, and in 1948 she founded St Nicholas School, Aberdeen, a co-educational progressive primary school. Here she introduced a culturestarved post-war generation to music, dance, plays, books, poster paints and big brushes. Scottish Country Dancing replaced ‘physical jerks’, town children were introduced to cookery, gardening and animal care, and Jean Allan once took a group of 11-year-olds to the Bath Festival (Beecham and Ballet Rambert). She inspired her protégés with enthusiasm for the best things in life and expanded the imagination. ag

personal chair in Contextual Theology. An inspirational, warm and rigorous teacher, she attracted international renown, some hostility and a fiercely devoted following, while remaining committed to movements for gender, sexual and social justice. Marcella Althaus-Reid sought to subvert the unexamined norms of dominant theologies. She believed her task, at the crossroads of feminism, liberation theology and queer thinking, was to reflect on economic and theological oppression with passion and imprudence. Indecent Theology (2000) challenged traditional gendered notions of decency and order in liberation theology and told ‘sexual stories’ of ‘indecent’ poor women, LGBT people, and Mary, to unmask controlling totalitarian hegemonies of church and state. The Queer God (2003) is a call ‘to liberate God from the closet of status quo theology’. For her, ‘queer’ included all who do not fit, and those who resist regulatory regimes, whether political or sexual. In her eyes, theology was a space of resistance and playful ­creativity. LO

• Personal knowledge. ALTHAUS-REID, Marcella Maria de los Angeles, n. Althaus, born Rosario, Argentina, 11 May 1952,

died Edinburgh 20 Feb. 2009. Feminist and queer liberation theologian, first female professor of theology at the University of Edinburgh. Daughter of Ada and Alberto Althaus. As she liked to recall, Marcella Althaus and Che Guevara were both natives of Rosario, where she grew up and trained as a teacher during a time of political repression under the military junta. Her grandmother’s Roman Catholicism was formative of her religious sensibilities, but she sought ordination to Protestant ministry. She was sponsored by the Methodist Church for theological education at the Instituto Superior Evangelico de Estudios Teologicos in Buenos Aires. Studying with leading liberation theologians including Jose Miguel Bonino, she developed her lifelong commitment to Freirean popular education, working in community projects with homeless and destitute people. She was invited to join a programme for young religious leaders in Norway and met Gordon Reid from Scotland. On marriage she moved to Dundee, engaging in community work with women from poor communities in Perth and Dundee, then undertaking doctoral studies at the University of St Andrews (1994). As a postgraduate she lectured in liberation pedagogy at Dundee College of Education and at New College, the University of Edinburgh. In 1994 she began her academic career in the Divinity Faculty. A prolific and provocative writer and speaker, her ground-breaking ­publications and reputation as an iconoclastic star in the theological firmament led in 2006 to a

• Hofheinz, H. (2015) ‘Implicate and transgress: Marcella Althaus-Reid, writing, and a transformation of theological knowledge’ PhD, Harvard Divinity School; The Herald, 11 Mar 2009 (obit.); Stanley, B. (2009) ‘Marcella Althaus-Reid, 1952–2009’, Studies in World Christianity 15:3, pp. iii–iv; (2009) New College Bulletin (University of Edinburgh), p. 6 (obit.). Private papers and knowledge. ALTSCHUL, Annie Therese, CBE, born Vienna 18 Feb. 1919, died Edinburgh 24 Dec. 2001. Nurse and academic. Daughter of Marie Altschul and Ludwig Altschul. Educated in Vienna, Annie Altschul moved to London in 1938 with her mother and sister, refugees from Nazi persecution. She worked as a mother’s help to learn English, then began nursing, one of the few careers open to refugees. She found general hospital nursing depersonalising and exasperating. Psychiatric nursing at Mill Hill Military Psychiatric hospital was more to her taste. At the Maudsley hospital (1946–64) she became principal tutor and gained a degree in psychology. In 1964, she was encouraged to move to the Department of Nursing Studies at the University of Edinburgh, where she taught for almost 20 years, being appointed professor of nursing in 1976. Her writings and support for therapeutic, humane and non-custodial approaches to mental nursing were influential in the profession. The papers edited for her Festschrift (2001) include her forthright comments on a visit to America in 1960–1. Following her retirement in

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1983 she pursued many interests and was an active member of the Mental Welfare Commission. bem

cog (a wooden vessel for measuring grain). A 39-page catalogue was printed. She left her museum in the care of Lord and *Lady Aberdeen (see Aberdeen and Temair) who set it up in Tarland, but it was closed down when the room was needed during the First World War. lrm

• Royal Coll. Nursing Archives: Altschul papers and oral history interview, T8. Altschul, A. (1976) Patient-nurse Interaction. The Scotsman, 4 Jan. 2002 (obit.); UK Centre for the History of Nursing (2001) A Festschrift for Annie Altschul. www.ukchnm.org

• Margaret Anderson’s Museum, Cromar (1908). Aberdeen, Lord and Lady [Gordon, J. C. and Gordon, I. M.] (1929) More Cracks with ‘We Twa’, pp. 129–38.

ANDERSON, Janet (Jenny), born 1697, died Edinburgh 3 March 1761. Milliner and maker of grave-clothes, Edinburgh. Daughter of Jean Ellis, advocate’s daughter, and James Anderson WS, author of Diplomata Scotiae. Janet Anderson entered the Merchant Company of Edinburgh in 1718. She sold millinery, gloves and accessories, and made grave-clothes. She travelled to London not only to buy goods but to sell goods at fairs. Writing to her brother in July 1718, she reported, ‘I heff disposed of the cargoe I brocht with me to good advantage’ and that she was bringing a large cargo home (Anderson Papers). Her bills from the 1740s and 1750s, many surviving in family papers, show she long continued in business. Her clients included well-to-do families and everyday Edinburgh customers: she made grave-clothes for Sir John Clerk of Penicuik and the Erskines of Dun, and wedding accessories for Lady Janet Maitland, daughter of the Earl of Lauderdale. ecs

ANDERSON, Margaret Harvie (Betty), Baroness Skrimshire, born Glasgow 12 August 1913, died

Worthing, Sussex, 7 Nov. 1979. Politician. Daughter of Margaret Agnes Wilson Shearer, and Colonel Thomas Alexander Harvie Anderson, of Quarter and Shirgarton in Stirlingshire, volunteer soldier, solicitor and magistrate. An only child, Betty Harvie Anderson was educated at the Quarter village school and at St Leonards School, St Andrews. In 1938, she entered local politics through her election to the Denny district council and in the same year she enlisted in the ATS. During the war she was rapidly promoted, rising to become Chief Commander of the Mixed Heavy Anti-Aircraft Brigade, 1943–6. In 1945, she resumed her political activities, serving successively on the county and town councils of Stirling until 1959, latterly as leader of the Moderate group, with particular interests in agriculture, education and welfare. Having been unsuccessful on three previous occasions, she was returned to Parliament as Conservative MP for Renfrewshire East in 1959, holding the seat until in 1979. In 1960 she married John Francis Penrose Skrimshire, MD, FRCP, a medical consultant, but kept her maiden name in Parliament. In 1964, to protect indigenous wildlife, she successfully introduced a bill to restrict the importation of animals to the UK. She was an able organiser, serving effectively as an influential member of many parliamentary committees. She was twice elected by her Conservative colleagues to the executive committee of the backbench 1922 Committee, 1962–70 and 1974–9. Her most important office was as Deputy Speaker of the Commons, 1970–73. Addressing a memorial service in Westminster Abbey in 1979, Enoch Powell described her as ‘a Parliamentarian to her finger tips, [who] instinctively understood and participated in every aspect of Parliamentary life . . . the House, with its unerring sense of what is fitting, chose her to be the first woman to sit in the Chair of Mr Speaker’ (Carmichael Papers).

• NLS: MS 29.1.2, vol. 218, Anderson Papers. *ODNB (2004); WWEE.

born or baptised Tarland, Aberdeenshire, 14 Dec. 1834, died 2 Oct. 1910. Creator of a roadside museum, Buchan. Daughter of Elspet Grant, and Robert Anderson, crofter, Culsh. Margaret Anderson’s schooling finished at the age of seven when she was employed to herd sheep. Subsequent occupations included domestic service, harvest work and teaching at a dame school. Despite much illness, including scarlet fever, diphtheria, typhus and rheumatic fever, she took over the running of the family croft when her father and stepmother became infirm. Margaret Anderson was a remarkable woman, despite her lack of education or opportunity. Her interests included fundraising for missionary work and her museum. From the age of seven, she had begun collecting items of interest including unusual stones, shells, old agricultural and household artifacts. Friends and acquaintances donated additional items, ranging from animal skins from Ngoniland to a haddish

ANDERSON, Margaret,

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From 1966 to 1969 she served on the Royal Commission on Scottish local government that led to the creation of regional local authorities. She signed a note of reservation to the Commission’s final report and her advice resulted in significant amendments to the legislation, notably separate councils for the three island groups. In 1973, she resigned as Deputy Speaker over government policy in favour of a devolved Scottish assembly. She believed it would challenge the sovereignty of the Westminster Parliament and would be ineffective in addressing Scottish problems. Through the cross-party Keep Britain United movement, she campaigned for the issue to be laid before the public in a referendum which led, eventually, to the failure of various attempts in the 1970s to establish a devolved administration for Scotland. Very much a traditional Conservative in outlook, her conversation tended to be crisp and to the point, but she was respected on all sides. The Labour MP Professor Alan Thomson wrote of her, ‘she brought to the House of Commons a refreshing honesty and sincerity, illuminated by a sparkling (if sometimes devastating) sense of humour’ (ibid.). In 1979 she was created a life peer, taking the title Baroness Skrimshire of Quarter. tb

tificate both gave as their profession ‘historical research worker’, which is what they remained for the rest of their working lives. After working together on the facsimile edition of the Chronicle of Melrose (1936), Marjorie Anderson published her first edited volume in 1938 (The Chronicle of Holyrood). They then worked on their greatest joint project, an edition and translation of the most important single source for early medieval Scottish history, Adomnan’s Life of Columba (c. 700). Alan suffered from poor eyesight, and Marjorie became his eyes, reading aloud articles and transcribing the notes which he would speak into a tape-recorder. After his death, Marjorie saw the Life of Columba through to publication in 1961, and oversaw a second edition published in 1991. After Alan’s death, Marjorie Anderson moved back to St Andrews where she wrote her greatest work, Kings and Kingship in Early Scotland (1973, rev. edn. 1980). It carefully analyses the fragmentary texts, mainly king lists, relating to the kingdoms of Dál Riata (Argyll) and Pictland, and the early kingdom of Alba (Scotland). These texts survive in poor, late copies. To construct a reliable historical framework, the relationships between the different surviving texts had to be painstakingly reconstructed. It is a pioneering work in textual archaeology, setting the highest of standards. The University of St Andrews awarded her a DLitt in 1973. On the occasion of Marjorie Anderson’s 90th birthday, a collection of essays, Kings, Clerics and Chronicles in Scotland 500–1297, was published and dedicated to her. The Andersons worked outwith the established academic community, devoting themselves to the unglamorous but essential task of evaluating difficult sources for an obscure historical period. They largely laid the foundations for the flourishing of early medieval Scottish scholarship in the latter part of the 20th century, which Marjorie Anderson lived to enjoy. A memorial lecture was established at St Andrews in the Andersons’ names in 2003. st

• Glasgow City Archives, Mitchell Library, Baroness Skrimshire of Quarter MSS, Constituency Papers TD 1164. Private papers of Mrs Blanche Carmichael, inc. Enoch Powell, MP, memorial address, 5 Dec. 1979. Begg, T. (2000) The Kingdom of Kippen; Glasgow Herald, 9 Nov. 1979 (obit.); ODNB (2004); The Scotsman, 8 Nov. 1979 (obit.); WWW, 1971–80. ANDERSON, Marjorie Ogilvie, n. Cunningham, born St Andrews 9 Feb. 1909, died St Andrews 27 May 2002. Scottish medieval historian. Daughter of Eveline Sandeman, and James Cunningham, jute manufacturer. Marjorie Cunningham was educated at St Leonards School, St Andrews, then read English at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford. Her career as one of the foremost early medieval Scottish historians began after her return to Scotland, when she attended palaeography classes given in Dundee by Alan Orr Anderson (1879–1958). Anderson was the leading early Scottish medievalist of his generation, having published two key source books in 1908 and 1922. They married in 1932 and settled in Dundee. On their marriage cer-

• Anderson, M. O., Works as above and (1974) ‘St Andrews before Alexander’, in G. W. S. Barrow (ed.) The Scottish Tradition. See also Taylor (Bibl.) below. Taylor, S. (ed.) (2000) Kings, Clerics and Chronicles in Scotland 500–1297 (Bibl.), (2004) The Anderson Century: 100 years of Scottish medieval scholarship. ANDREWS, Sheila Mahala, born Beckenham, 9 Feb. 1939, died Iona 27 Oct. 1997. Vertebrate

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­ alaeontologist. Daughter of Mahala Humphrey, p crafts teacher, and Alfred J. R. Andrews, GPO overseer. After her father died in 1941, Sheila (later known as Mahala) Andrews moved to Sydenham with her mother, and attended Beckenham Grammar School for Girls, then Girton College, Cambridge (BSc Zoology 1960). After seven years as research assistant to T. S. Westoll, Professor of Geology at the University of Newcastle-uponTyne, she returned to Girton in 1967 to complete her thesis on fossil lobe-finned fish, co-authoring a bench-mark paper (1970, Trans. RSE, 68, ­pp. 207–489). In 1968 she was appointed as Senior Scientific Officer in the Department of Geology at the RSM (now NMS) Edinburgh, becoming a Principal Scientific Officer in 1973. Her work on the group of fossil lobe-finned fish from which the first land vertebrates evolved is one of the principal foundations of research into the origin of amphibians. A wide knowledge of fossil fish led to her outstanding history, The Discovery of Fossil Fishes in Scotland up to 1845 (1982). (See Gordon-Cumming, Lady Eliza.) These achievements were combined with an astonishing technical virtuosity in the preparation of vertebrate fossil specimens, matched by a talent for drawing and calligraphy. She travelled widely, notably joining the first official palaeontological visit to China in 1979. Her strong Christian faith led her to embrace the religious community on Iona, where she bought a house after her early retirement through ill-health in 1993. jrr

death of their mother in 1914. After war work, the sisters moved first to Peebles then settled happily at Zoar, a cottage in the suburbs of Aberdeen. There, Marion Angus wrote most of the poems for which she is famous. In the early 1930s she gave up the house to be near Ethel, who became ill and hospitalised in Glasgow, and lived peripatetically with friends or in lodgings. Even after her sister’s death in 1936, Marion Angus had no settled home. A year before her own death she returned to Arbroath to be cared for by a friend. She contributed poetry and stories to journals, including Pearson’s Magazine, while young, and was published in Hugh MacDiarmid’s Northern Numbers (1921–2). Her first collection of poems, The Lilt, and Other Poems (1922), was published when she was 56. Five others followed. Her ­posthumous Selected Poems, edited by Maurice Lindsay (1950), contains a moving personal tribute by the poet *Helen Cruickshank, who first encountered her at a PEN meeting in Edinburgh and who shared her passion for poetry and her love of the Grampian foothills. Marion Angus’s poems are mostly written in the Scots of her native north east and show marked influence from ballads and folk song. Critics from her own period and shortly after tended to sentimentalise her poetry: Grierson and Smith say, for example, ‘She is the sweetest singer of them all, and has that touch of natural magic and that tragic undertone which, rightly or wrongly, we associate with Celtic blood’ (1947, p. 487). But the sadness of Marion Angus’s vision is balanced by its toughness, a hard recognition of things as they are. It is a tone that she probably learned from the ballads and it is uncompromising about pain and death. In ‘At Candlemas’, a young woman, afraid of a witch-like old woman, in no time at all becomes the old witch she is afraid of, asked in turn by a ‘blythe bairnie’, ‘Er’ ye the auld witch/O’ the Braid hill o’ Fare?’ And the girl who gives herself to her uncaring lover in ‘Mary’s Song’ knows that the sacramental gift of her body will not win his heart: ‘Though he be nae mine as I am his.’ Marion Angus’s poetry is as austere as it is impressive and its enigmatic stories of women’s lives are more often chilling than melting. New critical, editorial and biographical work by Katherine Gordon and Aimée Chalmers, who includes some prose in her 2006 anthology, aims to restore Angus to her proper place in the canon. DAM c M

• NMS: Complete list of publications and unpublished memorial, (1997) Reflections on Mahala Andrews. Andrews, S. M. et al. (1994) ‘Westlothiana lizziae from the visean of east Kirkton, West Lothian, Scotland and the amniote stem’, Trans. RSE Earth Sciences, 84, pp. 383–412; (2005, posthumous) ‘The structure of the sarcopterygian Onychodus jandemarrai n. sp. from Gogo, Western Australia,’ Trans. RSE Earth Sciences, 96, pp. 197–307. Glasgow Herald, 16 Dec. 1997, The Scotsman, 1 Dec. 1997 (obits); Turner, S. (1998) Ichthyolith Issues 19, pp. 11–12 (obit.)

born Sunderland 27 March 1865; died Arbroath 18 August 1946. Poet. Daughter of Mary Jessie Watson, and Rev. Dr Henry Angus, minister, United Presbyterian Church. Marion Angus’s father took the charge of Erskine Church, Arbroath, when she was eleven and she spent her youth there, one of six children. On his death in 1902, she moved with her mother and her sister, Ethel, to Cults, Aberdeen, where she and Ethel ran a small private school until the

ANGUS, Marion Emily,

• AUL: MS 3017/8/1/1, corr. and papers; NLS: MSS 19238, corr.

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and wore the latest fashions. English players were brought to Scotland to establish a theatre, despite Kirk opposition. Foreign musicians and poets flocked to court. When James VI succeeded to the English crown in 1603, the couple moved to the wealthier English court; Anna hosted lavish court masques and collected paintings from European artists. Inigo Jones designed masque sets and altered palaces at Oatlands and Greenwich. Music and poetry were at the heart of Anna’s English court. As she was unable to grasp the complexity of English court factions, Anna’s political role declined. The deaths of five of her children, especially Henry in 1612, distressed her, as did the departure of *Elizabeth (see Stewart, Elizabeth, Queen of Bohemia) who married Frederick of the Palatinate in 1613. Around this time she and her husband ceased to be sexually intimate but they remained friends; James was devastated by her death in 1619. Their separation was probably prompted more by Anna’s excessive grief and deteriorating health than a dislike of James’s preference for the company of favourites. One compensation was her close relationship to the future Charles I, who shared her passion for culture. However, she may have passed on her insistence upon the royal prerogative, with disastrous consequences for the subsequent Stewart monarchy. mmm

Angus, M., Works as above. Anderson, C. ‘Marion Angus’ www.slainte.org.uk/scotauth/ angusdsw.htm; Chalmers, A. (ed.) (2006) The Singin’ Lass: selected works of Marion Angus; Gordon, K. (ed.) (2006) Voices from Their Ain Countrie: the poems of Marion Angus and Violet Jacob; Grierson, H. J. C. and Smith, J. C. (1947) A Critical History of English Poetry; HSWW (Bibl.); ODNB (2004). ANNA OF DENMARK, Queen of Scotland and England, born Skanderborg Castle, Jutland,

12 Dec. 1574, died Hampton Court, 2 March 1619. Daughter of Sophia of Mecklenburg, and Frederick II, King of Denmark and Norway. Once dismissed as inconsequential, Anna of Denmark is now recognised for her important contribution to Scottish and English cultural life. Her childhood was happy, surrounded by her family, and her education emphasised cultural pursuits. A skilled linguist, she loved music and dancing. In 1589, James VI of Scotland (1566–1625) chose her as his bride; a dowry of £150,000 Scots was agreed and the proxy marriage ceremony took place at Kronborg Castle on 20 August 1589. Anna sailed for Scotland on 5 September, but severe storms (later blamed on *Agnes Sampson and the North Berwick witches) forced her fleet of 16 ships to land in Norway. In November the couple met for the first time in Oslo, where they married on 23 November. Following a visit to Denmark, they returned to Scotland on 1 May 1590. The Scots, having had no resident Queen since *Mary, Queen of Scots in 1567, celebrated Anna’s coronation with great style. Anna, having mastered the Scots tongue, made a significant impact upon the political world of the court. She meddled in court factions, defending favourites while attacking offenders, including the chancellor, John Maitland of Thirlestane, who had opposed the marriage. James always defended his wife’s honour in public, despite her favouring of his enemies, the Earls of Bothwell and Gowrie, and her adherence to Catholicism from the early 1590s, influenced by *Henrietta Stewart, Countess of Huntly. However, the couple were never reconciled over the custody of Prince Henry, born in 1594 after Anna had suffered several miscarriages. Henry lived at Stirling with the Mar family for his own protection. Anna, who was allowed to keep her other six children closer to her, never understood this enforced separation. Anna’s patronage enhanced Scottish culture. She rebuilt Dunfermline Palace in the latest style. She patronised jewellers such as George Heriot

• Meikle, M. M. (2008) ‘Anna of Denmark’s coronation and entry into Edinburgh, 1590: cultural, religious and diplomatic perspectives’, in J. Goodare and A. A. MacDonald (eds) Sixteenth-Century Scotland: essays in honour of Michael Lynch, pp. 277–94; Meikle, M. M. and Payne, H. M. (2013) ‘From Lutheranism to Catholicism: the faith of Anna of Denmark (1574–1619)’, The Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 64/1, pp. 45–69; *ODNB (2004) (see Anne of Denmark); Payne, H. M. (2001) ‘Aristocratic women and the Jacobean court, 1603–1625’, PhD, Univ. of London. ANNABELLA Drummond, Queen of Scotland, born before 1367, died probably Scone, autumn 1401. Daughter of Sir John Drummond and his wife. Inheritance patterns suggest that Annabella Drummond was the daughter of Mary, daughter of William de Montefichet. Annabella married John Stewart, Lord of Kyle (mid-1330s–1406), eldest son and heir of Robert the Steward, before 31 May 1367. The prestigious match was probably arranged through the influence of Annabella’s aunt, *Margaret Logie (Drummond), Queen of Scotland, wife of David II. David’s nearest male heir was his nephew, Robert the Steward. The King’s grant of the earldom of Carrick to John and Annabella in

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1368 suggests that he had accepted the likelihood of a Stewart succession. The marriage, however, ensured that Queen Margaret would be succeeded as queen by her own niece. John and Annabella named their eldest son and daughter David and Margaret, suggesting they viewed themselves as the royal heirs. Their other four children included the future James I. In 1371, Annabella Drummond’s father-in-law became Robert II. On 19 April 1390, John succeeded, changing his name to Robert III. Political disturbances in the north delayed Robert’s coronation until 14 August, Annabella apparently being crowned the following day. Parliament assigned Annabella an annuity of 2,500 merks to support her royal household. A highly significant and active political figure, Queen Annabella was also influential in the career of her son, David, born in 1378, especially after physical infirmity weakened Robert III’s political authority. She gave tacit support to a political coup in 1398/9 which established David, who became Duke of Rothesay, as lieutenant of the kingdom. The 15th-century chronicler Walter Bower saw Annabella’s death in 1401 as profoundly affecting David who, freed from her moderating influence, began to behave recklessly. David’s actions alienated his political supporters, and he died a prisoner of his uncle, Robert, Duke of Albany, in March 1402. Annabella herself, however, was commemorated in glowing terms by 15th-century chroniclers. Around 1373, Annabella’s brother Malcolm Drummond married Isabella Douglas (c. 1360–1408), daughter of Margaret, countess of Mar, and William, earl of Douglas. An ally of the Duke of Rothesay, he died in captivity a year after Annabella’s death. In 1404, Alexander Stewart, illegitimate son of Alexander earl of Buchan, *Queen Euphemia’s stepson, forced Isabella, now countess of Mar, to marry him, giving him control of Mar. Isabella’s aunt, Margaret Stewart, countess of Angus (c. 1354–c. 1418) and dowager countess of Mar, began a relationship, regarded as both adulterous and incestuous, with her brother-in-law, Earl William, Isabella’s father, in the 1370s. Wielding great influence after Earl William’s death in 1384, she secured for their illegitimate son, George Douglas, the right to succeed her in Angus and a royal marriage to Annabella’s daughter Mary in 1397. SB

S. (1996) The Early Stewart Kings; *ODNB (2004) (Bibl.); Scotichron., vol. 8.

• Boardman, S. (2014) ‘Lords and Women, Women as Lords: the career of Margaret Stewart, Countess of Angus and Mar, c. 1354–c. 1418’ in S. Boardman and J. Goodare (eds) Kings, Lords and Men in Scotland and Britain, 1300–1625; Boardman,

• Archive: University of Glasgow Library: Papers of Louise Annand (MS Annand) http://special.lib.gla.ac.uk/manu scripts/search/detail_c.cfm?ID=99559 Annand, L., Works as above.

ANNAND, Louise Gibson, MBE, m1 Matheson, m2 MacFarquhar, born Uddingston 27 May 1915, died

Glasgow 6 Jan. 2012. Educationist, artist, filmmaker, illustrator. Daughter of Emma Louise Gibson and Walter Dinnie Annand, both schoolteachers. After Hamilton Academy, Louise Annand hoped to attend the GSA but her father insisted she study English at the University of Glasgow. She graduated in 1937, and after teacher training at Jordanhill (1938–9), pursued a double life, ‘teaching by day and taking night classes at the GSA’ (Catalogue, 2004). She left teaching in 1949, entering the Glasgow Museum Education Service (GMES), meantime exhibiting her artwork. She went on to run the History Department of the GMES at Glasgow Art Galleries, working until her retirement in 1980, when she was awarded an MBE. The University of Glasgow bestowed an Honorary Doctorate in 1997. After the death of her first husband, Alistair Matheson, she married Roderick MacFarquhar (1908–89), former secretary of the Highland Fund. A founder member of the New Art Club – established (1940) by J. D. Fergusson to allow women members, and its successor the New Scottish Group – Louise Annand, tired of being called ‘a girl’, sometimes signed as ‘Richard’ or ‘Dick’. Working with oil, watercolour, and pen and ink, she documented overlooked areas of Glasgow and painted landscapes, from Lanarkshire to the mountains she climbed with the Ladies Scottish Climbing Club. President both of the SSWA and the Glasgow SWA, and a senior official of the Scottish Education Media Association, she chaired their Glasgow Production Group in 1958. She directed and produced several educational films, including At the Museum (1953), Sauchiehall Street Rooftops (1956), and History of Lighting (1959), as well as producing the film Charles Rennie Mackintosh (1965), and chairing the J. D. Fergusson Foundation. Her publications include J. D. Fergusson in Glasgow 1939–1961 (2003); and A Glasgow Sketchbook: A Quarter Century of Observation (1988). Authors whose books she illustrated included *Naomi Mitchison and *Lavinia Derwent. JB r

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(1920–6), when it was most strongly feminist, ‘broad-ranging, trenchant and critical’ (Eoff 1991, p. 120). Time & Tide was published by Margaret Rhondda and she, Helen and the children lived together in London and Kent, part of a progressive intellectual circle. Margaret Rhondda founded the Six Point Group in 1921, with Helen Archdale as secretary and later international secretary. Betty Archdale became political secretary. As tensions between differently focused feminisms grew, they founded the Open Door Council in 1926, with *Chrystal Macmillan and *Wilhelmina (Elizabeth) Abbott, to focus on economic emancipation. Helen Archdale also campaigned for the admission of peeresses to the House of Lords. Following a bitter break in 1926, when Rhondda took over the editorship of Time & Tide, Helen Archdale became prominent in international feminist activism, working in Geneva from 1927 and lobbying for an Equal Rights Treaty at the League of Nations in the early 1930s. She became secretary of the Liaison Committee of Women’s International Organisations, a coalition to promote equal rights, disarmament and women’s representation at the League. As first chair of Equal Rights International, founded at The Hague in 1929, she was active in Open Door International, also founded in 1929, and a leading advocate of the equalitarian feminism seen as ‘extreme’ by the League of Nations. In the late 1930s she was associated with the World Women’s Party. She contributed articles to The Times, Daily News, Christian Science Monitor and The Scotsman. She was described as ‘large of mind and body and forthrightness’ (MacPherson 2002, pp. 123–4), but the title of her unpublished autobiography, An Interfering Female, suggests an ambivalent self-image. si

Fergusson, J. D. et al. (eds) (1947) The New Scottish Group; The Herald, 14 Jan. 2012 (obit.); Lillie Art Gallery, Milngavie, retrospective catalogue, 2004; MSW; The Scotsman, 14 Jan. 2012 (obit.).

n. Russel, born Nenthorn, Berwick, 25 Aug. 1876, died London 8 Dec. 1949. Suffragette, journalist, feminist campaigner. Daughter of Helen Carter de Lacy Evans, campaigner for medical education, and Alexander Russel, journalist. Helen Russel’s mother, Helen Evans (1834–1903), a widow, was one of the first group of five female medical students at the University of Edinburgh, led by *Sophia Jex-Blake. She matriculated on 2 November 1869, but gave up her medical studies two years later (‘treachery’ according to Jex-Blake) to marry Alexander Russel (1814–76), the Liberal campaigning editor of The Scotsman, who had championed the medical women’s cause. Widowed again, with three children, she continued to support women’s medical education, sitting on the first executive committee of the Edinburgh School of Medicine for Women (1886). Helen Russel, born soon after her father’s death, was educated at St Leonards School and the University of St Andrews, one of the first women undergraduates. In 1901 she married Theodore M. Archdale (1873–1918), a lieutenant-colonel in the Royal Artillery, and spent her early married life in Lancashire and India. They had two sons and one daughter, and later separated. On her return from India in 1908, she joined the WSPU and became its organiser in several cities, including Edinburgh (at the time of the 1909 suffrage procession). Later she was WSPU prisoners’ secretary, organising information and comforts; she worked on The Suffragette, and deputised for the Pankhursts when they were in prison in 1912. She was twice imprisoned for militant protests (Dundee, October 1909, initiating one of the first hunger strikes with four others, and London, 1911). Her daughter, Betty Archdale (1907–2000), remembered collecting stones for her mother to use to break Whitehall windows, and visiting her in Holloway Prison. During the war, she worked at WAAC HQ for *Mona Chalmers Watson, then at the Women’s Department of the Ministry of National Service, for Lady Mackworth, later Viscountess Rhondda (1883–1958), with whom Helen Archdale had a close personal, political and professional relationship until the early 1930s. Helen Archdale was the first editor of the political and literary weekly review Time & Tide,

ARCHDALE, Helen Alexander,

• The Women’s Library, London: Equal Rights International papers. DNB (1909) (Russel, Alexander); Edinburgh School of Medicine for Women, First Report 1886–8; Eoff, S. M. (1991) Viscountess Rhondda: equalitarian feminist; MacPherson, D. (2002) The Suffragette’s Daughter: Betty Archdale; ODNB (2004); Rupp, L. J. (1997) Worlds of Women: the making of an international women’s movement; Todd, M. (1918) Life of Sophia Jex-Blake; WSM.

fl. c. ad 210. The wife of Argentocoxos was spouse of a tribal leader of the Calidones, a people based in central Scotland who were subdued in 208–10 by the Roman emperor Severus. Historian Cassius Dio described her ‘jesting’ with the empress after

ARGENTOCOXOS, wife of,

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the campaign. The empress remarked upon ‘the free intercourse of her sex with men in Britain’, men who, Dio reported, ‘possess their women in common, and in common rear all the offspring’. Argentocoxos’s wife replied ‘we fulfil the demands of nature in a much better way than do you Roman women; for we consort openly with the best men, whereas you let yourselves be debauched in secret by the vilest’. Contrasting barbarian societies’ primitive virtue with Roman vices was a standard literary topos; it is unlikely that the conversation occurred. This places the wife of Argentocoxos on shaky historical ground, but the name (‘Silverfoot’) is genuinely British, and it is possible that the meeting of Argentocoxos and Severus involved their wives. jef

Kirkyard, on 1 April 1834, thousands, including local officials, came to her funeral, as a mark of respect. In 2004 a statue was erected to her in Brooms Road, Dumfries, by the Burns Howff Club. mb • Ayrshire Archaeological Society (1996) Mauchline Memories of Robert Burns; Bell, M. (2001) Tae The Lasses; Hill, J. C. (1961) The Love Songs and Heroines of Robert Burns; ODNB (2004) (Burns, Robert); Stevenson, Y. H. (1967) Burns and his Bonnie Jean; Westwood, P. J. (1996) Jean Armour, (2001) Jean Armour: my life and times with Robert Burns.

born Fairliehope farm, Carlops, 9 May 1903, died West Linton 20 Nov. 1985. Borders shepherd. Daughter of Margaret (Maggie) Carruthers, and Andrew Armstrong, tenant farm manager. Jenny Armstrong walked to school at Nine Mile Burn and, as a child, worked the sheep with her father, doing her first lambing at the age of nine. By her twenties she was working a large hill herd with three dogs in difficult Pentlands terrain at over 1,000 feet. She spent all her life as a hill shepherd, often in inclement conditions, at Spital, Carpet, New Hall and South Mains, having moved in the 1940s to Monk’s Cottage in the isolated hamlet of Kittleyknowe, which remained her home thereafter. Much of the record of her later life is pictorial: in 1970, when she had retired from the hills but still kept a small flock, the artist Victoria Crowe came to live next door, and Jenny Armstrong became a friend and the focus of the painter’s work. Jenny’s fast-disappearing way of life and environment were captured in more than 50 paintings and drawings by Victoria Crowe, shown in the exhibition ‘A Shepherd’s Life’ at the SNPG in 2000. These depicted her journey from vigour to illness and from an outdoor life to an indoor one. The exhibition attracted more than 30,000 visitors, and in 2015 the NGS acquired works relating to ‘A Shepherd’s Life’ for the permanent ­collection. vc

ARMSTRONG, Janet (Jenny),

• Cary, E. (ed.) (1927) Dio’s Roman History, vol. 9. ARGYLL, Anna, Countess of see MACKENZIE, Anna, Countess of Balcarres, Countess of Argyll

­(1621–1707) ARGYLL, Isabella, Countess of see ISEABAIL NÍ MHEIC CAILEIN (fl. 1480s–1490s)

m. Burns, born Mauchline 25 Feb. 1765, died Dumfries 26 March 1834. Wife of Robert Burns, poet. Daughter of Mary Smith, and James Armour, master builder. Jean Armour said that she met Robert Burns (1759–96) on the Mauchline bleaching green. Their relationship was secret until she became pregnant around December 1785. The couple formed an irregular marriage but her parents disapproved and in March 1786 sent her to relations in Paisley for the duration of her pregnancy. She returned to Mauchline in June and gave birth to twins on 3 September 1786. On 5 August 1788, their earlier relationship was regularised by the Mauchline Kirk. Jean Armour contributed to Burns’s work as a listener and critic. She would also sing to him some of the old Scots songs, which he would then adapt or change. She gave birth to nine children by him – four daughters, all of whom died before the age of three, and five sons. As Burns’s coffin was carried to St Michael’s Kirkyard, Dumfries, on 25 July 1796, Maxwell, her last child, was born. After Burns’s death, she remained at Millbrae Vennel (now Burns Street), Dumfries, playing host to numerous visitors. Tennyson was one of many poets who called on her, reading ‘Thou Ling’ring Star’ on his visit. When Jean Armour died and was interred in the Burns Mausoleum in St Michael’s

ARMOUR, Jean,‡

• Crowe, V. and Walton, M. (2001) Painted Insights; Lawson, J. and Taubman, M. (2000) Victoria Crowe: ‘A Shepherd’s Life’, catalogue and film, NGS; Macmillan, D. (2012) Victoria Crowe; Scotland on Sunday 23 Jan. 2000. Private information and archive. ARRAN, Elizabeth, Countess of see STEWART, Elizabeth, Countess of Arran (c. 1554–c. 1595) ARRAN, Fiona, Countess of, n. Fiona Bryde Colquhoun, born Luss, 20 July 1918, died Castle

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Hill, Devon, 16 May 2013. Powerboat racer. Daughter of Geraldine Bryde (Dinah) Tennant, champion golfer, and Sir Iain Colquhoun of Luss, army officer. Fiona Colquhoun was introduced to powerboat speed in 1932, aged 13. Her career began with her first race, at Iver, in 1965. As the sole woman competitor in the 1966 Paris six- hours circuit marathon on the Seine, she finished 14th out of 90. She set several records, including 55mph in the Cornish 100 (1969); the Class 1 speed record of 55mph at Lake Windermere (1972); the Class 2 World Record of 93mph (1979); and a world record of 102 mph in 1980, aged 62. The first woman to be awarded the Segrave Trophy, she retired in 1981. In a brief comeback in 1989 she helped produce and pilot an electronically propelled hydroplane, achieving a silent and environmentally friendly record of 50.825mph at age 71. Fiona Colquhoun married Arthur Strange Gore, 8th earl of Arran (1910–83) in 1937. They had two sons. She was a driver with the Wrens during wartime. A lover of animals, she helped pilot the Badger Protection Bill through Parliament. Lady Arran regularly wore some item of Colquhoun tartan and remained a staunch supporter of Loch Lomond and the surrounding area. She was buried at Luss. GJ

destitute following discharge from hospital. James Arthur donated a site for the West Kilbride Convalescent Home, opened in 1868. They contributed to the building of the Paisley model ­lodging-house and provided mid-morning tea for the inmates of the poor house. The Jane Arthur Fund, which paid for the convalescence of poor patients, was established in 1903. From the late 1860s, Jane Arthur supported both temperance and the suffrage movement. She held drawing-room meetings and in 1882 was present at a Scottish national demonstration in Glasgow. Her brothers-in-law were on the platform at a public meeting in Paisley in 1871 addressed by Millicent Fawcett. After the 1872 Education Act, Jane Arthur came top of the poll for the Paisley School Board in 1873, the first woman to be elected in the West of Scotland. Following this The Bailie, while extolling her virtues, commented critically on her ‘inclination to espouse the cause of “the shrieking sisterhood” who rave about “woman’s rights” and “woman’s wrongs” ’, and hoped she would ‘remain contented with the ruling power she already exercised’. She joined the organising committee of the GAHEW in 1877 and provided bursaries for a Renfrewshire student and, later, for a woman medical student. Arthur Street, Paisley, is named after her. cjm

• The Herald, 12 June 2013, The Scotsman, 10 June 2013, The Telegraph, 7 June 2013 (obits); Arran, Fiona Lady, Classic Offshore Powerboat Club Record, http://www.classicoffshore.com/blog/2013/05/28/1733

• Paisley Infirmary: Annual Reports 1863–1903; Glasgow Univ. Archives: QMC Collection DC233. Barclay, J. F. (1953) The Story of Arthur and Company, private circulation; Glasgow Herald, 27 May 1907 (obit.); ODNB (2004); The Bailie, 36, 25 June 1873; Women’s Suffrage Journal, 1 Nov. 1882.

n. Glen, born Broomlands, Paisley, 18 Nov. 1827, died Ayr 25 May 1907. Social reformer and supporter of women’s emancipation. Daughter of Jessie Fulton, and Thomas Glen, baker and grain merchant. The third of five children, Jane Glen grew up living alongside her father’s bakery in Broomlands, then the family moved to the outskirts of Paisley. On 21 Dec. 1847, she married James Arthur (1819–85), developer of a large manufacturing and wholesale drapery business. They had one daughter and four sons, and resided at the estate of Barshaw, Paisley. Their eldest son, Matthew, became the first Lord Glenarthur (1852–1928). Jane Arthur set up a Dorcas Society around 1863, to provide clothing for convalescents from Paisley Infirmary. In 1866 the Paisley Ladies’ Sanitary Association, which promoted public baths, was instituted with Jane Arthur as vice-president. For many years the Arthurs supplied soup and bread to patients

ARTHUR, Jane,

ASQUITH, Emma Alice Margaret (Margot), n. Tennant, born Glen, Innerleithen, 2 Feb. 1864,

died London 28 July 1945. Political hostess, diarist. Daughter of Emma Winsloe, and Sir Charles Tennant, industrialist and Liberal MP. One of 11 children in the Tennant family, whose wealth came from the chemical industry in the west of Scotland, Margot Tennant enjoyed a Borders childhood, and was educated privately before she and her sister Laura, witty and unconventional girls, ‘came out’ in London society. She was ‘the best-educated ill-educated woman I ever met’, Benjamin Jowett remarked (DNB 1950). After Laura’s death in childbirth in 1886, Margot Tennant was drawn into the political and intellectual circle nicknamed ‘the Souls’. In 1894, she married the widowed Herbert Henry Asquith (1852–1928), MP for East Fife from 1882 for 32 20

ATHOLL

years, then for Paisley, and future prime minister. She became stepmother to the five Asquith children, and had two surviving children of her own after several pregnancies: Elizabeth (1897–1945) and Anthony (‘Puffin’, 1902–68), later a successful film director. In 1905, H. H. Asquith became chancellor of the exchequer, and in 1908 prime minister. Margot Asquith kept detailed diaries recording the years at the centre of power. Although ‘political judgement was not her strongest suit’ (Asquith 1992, intro. p. xii), she presumed to advise politicians, who did not always take kindly to it. Her extravagance, financed by her father, was also unpopular, but she was not frivolous, being a devout Christian. Devotedly loyal to H. H. Asquith, she bitterly resented Lloyd George’s ousting him from the leadership in 1916 (of Lloyd George, she said, ‘He couldn’t see a belt without hitting below it’, ibid., p. xxxv). She took little interest in Scottish politics, but spent much time in Scotland, often at her brother’s house, Archerfield, near North Berwick, playing golf at Muirfield – once in a ‘black afternoon dress and satin toque’, (Bennett 1984, p. 354). Her Autobiography (1920–2) was frank if not always reliable. Her oft-quoted aphorisms have been exaggerated, but she did say, ‘After foxhunting, the greatest pleasure I have had in life has been intellectual and enduring conversation’ (DNB 1950). She died in July 1945, just as news came both of her daughter’s death and of the Labour landslide. sr

anxious’ to aid her husband politically (Atholl 1958, p. 55). The marriage was close, despite Tullibardine’s frequent extra-marital affairs, as reflected in the title of their joint autobiography Working Partnership. Her hospital work at Blair Atholl during the First World War was renowned, and she was appointed DBE in 1918. Although she at one time opposed votes for women, she was invited to stand in 1923 for the new seat of Kinross and West Perthshire. Elected, she became Scotland’s first woman MP and in 1924 the first Conservative female minister, serving as Under-Secretary at the Board of Education from 1924 to 1929. Apparently it was supposed that she would be ‘loyal and decorous’ (Hetherington 1989, pp. 108–9). From 1923 to 1929 she focused mainly on domestic questions, though raising the controversial issue of African female circumcision foreshadowed her later focus on three major international issues: forced labour in Stalin’s Russia; Indian self-rule; and the plight of Spanish civil war refugees, which she linked with the European fascist threat. Her views on India and Spain set her on a collision course with her party. In May 1935 she resigned the Conservative whip for several months over the passing of the India Act. She believed that self-government would lead to civil war and communal strife and she was concerned about the treatment of girls and women in India (including child marriages and Hindu temple prostitution). Her position on Spain came as the last straw. De-selected in 1938, the Duchess resigned to fight a by-election on her opposition to appeasement. Dubbed the ‘Red Duchess’ by Conservative opponents, she found her defeat ‘totally unexpected’ (Ball 1990, p. 78). In 1939, however, she was elected as Independent candidate for the Scottish Universities, but resigned in 1940 to rejoin the Unionists when Winston Churchill became Prime Minister. Widowed in 1942, she worked for the Red Cross throughout the war and acted as Honorary Secretary on the Scottish ‘Invasion Committee’ which was charged with the task of preparing civil resistance and obstruction in the event of invasion. The close of hostilities renewed her concern about the Soviet Union and in 1945 she became Chairman of the British League for European Freedom. In this capacity she became ‘totally occupied with Poles and other refugees’ (Hetherington 1989, p. 222). From 1955 her health and memory began to fail, although she published Working Partnership in 1958. She died after a fall while climbing a wall in 1960. Although

• Bodleian Library: Papers of Margot Asquith Asquith, M. [1920–2] (1992 re-edn., intro. Bonham-Carter, M.) Autobiography. Bennett, D. (1984) Margot: a life of the Countess of Oxford and Asquith ; Brock, M. and E. (2014) Margot Asquith’s Great War Diary 1914–1916; DNB (1950, by L. P. Hartley); ODNB (2004) (Bibl.). ATHOLL, Katharine Marjory Stewart Murray, Duchess of, n. Ramsay DBE, born Edinburgh 6 Nov. 1874,

died Edinburgh 21 Oct. 1960. First Scottish woman MP, Conservative government minister. Daughter of Charlotte Fanning, and Sir James Ramsay, 10th Baronet of Bamff, Perthshire. Educated at Wimbledon High School and the Royal College of Music, Katharine Ramsay, like her mother, was a talented musician. Her marriage in 1899 to John, Lord Tullibardine (1871–1942), Unionist MP for West Perthshire 1910–17 and from 1917, 8th Duke of Atholl, took her into public life, initially because she was ‘naturally 21

ATHOLL

Daughter of Selma Sachs, and Friedrich Auerbach, chemist. Born into an artistic and scientific family, Lotte Auerbach studied at Berlin, Würzburg and Freiburg. Her grandfather, Leopold Auerbach (1828–97), was a neuro-anatomist and discoverer of Auerbach’s plexus. She taught until 1933, when Jewish teachers were expelled, then fled from Germany. Through an introduction to Professor Barger of the University of Edinburgh, Lotte Auerbach became a PhD student in the Institute of Animal Genetics. In 1938 she was introduced to the science of mutagenics, by the Nobel laureate Hermann Joseph Müller. With A. J. Clark and J. M. Robson in 1942, she discovered that mustard gas (used in trench warfare) caused genetic mutation in drosophila (fruit flies), and in so doing, founded the study of gene mutation by chemicals (mutagenesis), her particular contribution to science. Her approach was biological rather than chemical, emphasising the complexity of the biological interaction. Mustard gas proving dangerous, she later used other agents and the fungus neurospora, a bread mould, to investigate mutant and non-mutant cells, establishing the principle that increased mutation occurred in stored genes affected by a mutagen, ‘replicating instabilities’, which affected later generations. An independentminded scientist, her research was conducted in great depth. Until the age of 70, she directed the Mutagenesis Research Unit of the MRC. She destroyed most of her scientific and personal ­correspondence and records, but was responsible for a total of 91 scientific publications, as well as a book of fairy stories, Adventures with Rosalind, under the pseudonym Charlotte Austen (1947). A supporter of CND, she hated racism. She ­unofficially ‘adopted’ two boys, one a German refugee. In addition to being FRS (1957) and FRSE, she was awarded the Keith Medal (1947) and the Darwin Medal (1976) and held honorary degrees from Edinburgh, Leiden, Cambridge and Dublin. Her ashes were scattered at Rhu, Arisaig. ls

her party political career was effectively over by 1938, as an ‘accidental trailblazer’ (Hetherington 1989, pp. 120–1) she was a pioneering female politician who made an important contribution to the debate on British foreign policy in the inter-war period. cb • Blair Castle, Blair Atholl: Atholl MSS. Duchess of Atholl (1932) Women and Politics, (1938) Searchlight on Spain, (1958) Working Partnership. Ball, S. (1990) ‘The politics of appeasement: the fall of the Duchess of Atholl’, Scot. Hist. Rev., vol. LXIX; Burness, C. (1998) ‘Tracing women in Scottish politics since 1880 and the case of an accidental trailblazer: Katharine, Duchess of Atholl’, Scottish Archives, vol. 4; Hetherington, S. (1989) Katharine Atholl, 1874–1960: against the tide ; Knox, W. W. J. (2006) The Lives of Scottish Women; ODNB (2004) (see Murray, Katharine Marjory Stewart-). ATHOLL, Katherine, Duchess of see HAMILTON, Katherine, Duchess of Atholl (1662–1707) AUD (aka UNN), the Deep-Minded, born Norway c. 850, died Iceland c. 900. Founding settler of Iceland. Daughter of Yngvild, daughter of Ketil Wether, and Ketil Flat-Nose, Norse ruler of the Hebrides. Kin to powerful Norwegian chieftains, Aud married Olaf the White, King of Dublin (fl. 853–c. 871). She is said to have left for the Hebrides with her son Thorstein the Red when Olaf was killed. However, the couple may have become estranged before Olaf became king, leading to Aud’s earlier return to her father. Thorstein conquered and ruled much of northern Scotland until killed by the Scots. Aud, who was in Caithness, assumed command of Thorstein’s household and moved family and possessions to Iceland where she claimed land and distributed portions to her followers; several place-names testify to her presence. Her epithet, ‘the Deep-Minded’, may refer to the insight she demonstrated in distributing land to good settlers, and the dignity she maintained throughout her life. Aud brought her Gaelic Christianity to Iceland, but one saga gives her a pagan chieftain’s ship burial, symbol of the high regard in which she was held. jw

• Auerbach, C. (1956) Genetics in the Atomic Age, (1962) Mutation. An Introduction to Research on Mutagenesis, (1962) The Science of Genetics, (1976) Mutation Research Problems, Results and Perspectives. Beale, G. H. (1995) ‘Charlotte Auerbach’, in Biographical Memoirs of the Fellows of the Royal Society, 41, pp. 19–42 (Bibl.); Grinstein, L., Biermann, C. A. and Rose K. (1997) Women in the Biological Sciences: A bibliographical sourcebook; ODNB (2004).

• Magnusson, M. and Pálsson, H. (trans.) (1969) Laxdaela Saga; Pálsson H. and Edwards, P. (trans.) (1972) The Book of Settlements: Landnámabók, (1973) Eyrbyggja Saga. AUERBACH, Charlotte (Lotte) [Charlotte Austen],

FRS, FRSE, born Krefeld, Germany, 14 May 1899, died Edinburgh 17 March 1994. Geneticist. 22

BAILLIE

n. Maese, m1 Murray, m2 Aust, born probably in Bath 1744, died London 5 Nov. 1811. Topographical writer on Scotland. In 1783, aged 39, Sarah Maese married Captain William Murray RN (1734–86), third son of the Earl of Dunmore. Although he died only three years later, it is likely that Sarah Murray acquired her passionate interest in Scotland through her husband. She was 52 when she started a tour of almost 2,000 miles through Scotland and the north of England, an experience she turned into a comprehensive travel guide, published two years later. In the introduction to the Guide, the author claims that she provides the traveller with information ‘I believe never attended to (in the way I have done) by any of my Predecessors in Tour’; she writes about everything ‘worthy

of note . . . and by what means they can get at them’ (Murray 1799, intro.). From her account, she comes across as a truly intrepid traveller, not put off by primitive hostelling or road conditions, and with a keen eye for the wild, romantic ­beauties as well as the social conditions of the Scotland of her time. Although she remarried in 1802, to George Aust (d. 1829), a career civil servant, the three editions of her Guide were ­published under the name the Hon. Mrs Murray. m v h

AUST, Sarah,

• Murray, Hon. Mrs [1799] A Companion and Useful Guide to the Beauties of Scotland [etc.] (1982, W. E. Laughlan, (ed.), (1803) A Companion and Useful Guide to the Beauties in the Western Highlands of Scotland [etc.]; Murray Aust, Hon. Mrs (1811) [Combined version of the above]; ODNB (2004) (see Murray, Sarah).

B BAILLIE, Lady Grisell, n. Hume (or Home), born Redbraes Castle, Berwickshire, 25 Dec. 1665, died Mellerstain 6 Dec. 1746. Poet, household manager. Daughter of Grisell Ker, and Sir Patrick Hume, later Earl of Marchmont. In 1676, Grisell Hume, aged 11, undertook a dangerous mission when her father’s friend, Robert Baillie of Jerviswood, was fined and imprisoned in Edinburgh for rescuing his brother-in-law, the Covenanting Rev. James Kirkton, who was in trouble with the authorities. Anxious to get a message to Robert Baillie, Sir Patrick sent his daughter to Edinburgh Tolbooth, where she delivered his letters to the prisoner and met his son, George Baillie (1664–1738). After Robert Baillie was arrested again in 1683 for complicity in the Rye House Plot, Sir Patrick Hume realised that his own life was in danger and hid in the vaults of Polwarth Church, the troopers having taken possession of his castle of Redbraes. Grisell regularly brought him food, visiting him at midnight with the morsels she had concealed in her lap during her own dinner. When Robert Baillie was executed, Grisell Hume and her family, including her father, fled to Holland and settled in Utrecht, where she met George Baillie again. After the Revolution of 1688, Grisell Hume was offered but declined a position as maid of honour to Queen Mary II. In love with George Baillie, she knew that she would not see him if she were to

settle in London. Instead, she returned to Scotland and married him on 17 September 1692. Attractive, charming and an excellent businesswoman as well as a talented poet, Grisell was his wife for 46 years. They had two daughters, ‘Grisie’ (1692–1559) and Rachel, and a short-lived son. Living at Mellerstain after her marriage, she put all her father’s affairs in order and looked after her brother’s interests when he was abroad. Her husband entrusted her with the entire management of his own finances until his death in 1738. She was buried in 1746 at Mellerstain, where her famous household books have been carefully preserved. Noting in meticulous detail her household expenditure from 1692 to 1733, they provide an invaluable source for the social ­historian. rkm Grisie Baillie married Alexander Murray of Stanhope for love in 1710, but sued for separation in 1714. A London society figure, in 1721 she repelled an assault by a footman with a pistol. The resulting trial was a cause célèbre. Her memoir of her parents was published posthumously. RKM • Mellerstain: The Earl of Haddington’s Archives. Kerrigan, C. (1991) An Anthology of Scottish Women’s Poetry; Scott-Moncrieff, R. (ed.) (1911) The Household Book of Lady Grisell Baillie 1692–1733; Murray of Stanhope, G., Lady (1821) Memoirs of the Lives and Characters of the Honourable George Baillie and Lady Grisell Baillie of Jerviswood; ODNB (2004); SP; Swain, M. (1970) Historical Needlework.

23

BAILLIE

n. Maese, m1 Murray, m2 Aust, born probably in Bath 1744, died London 5 Nov. 1811. Topographical writer on Scotland. In 1783, aged 39, Sarah Maese married Captain William Murray RN (1734–86), third son of the Earl of Dunmore. Although he died only three years later, it is likely that Sarah Murray acquired her passionate interest in Scotland through her husband. She was 52 when she started a tour of almost 2,000 miles through Scotland and the north of England, an experience she turned into a comprehensive travel guide, published two years later. In the introduction to the Guide, the author claims that she provides the traveller with information ‘I believe never attended to (in the way I have done) by any of my Predecessors in Tour’; she writes about everything ‘worthy

of note . . . and by what means they can get at them’ (Murray 1799, intro.). From her account, she comes across as a truly intrepid traveller, not put off by primitive hostelling or road conditions, and with a keen eye for the wild, romantic ­beauties as well as the social conditions of the Scotland of her time. Although she remarried in 1802, to George Aust (d. 1829), a career civil servant, the three editions of her Guide were ­published under the name the Hon. Mrs Murray. m v h

AUST, Sarah,

• Murray, Hon. Mrs [1799] A Companion and Useful Guide to the Beauties of Scotland [etc.] (1982, W. E. Laughlan, (ed.), (1803) A Companion and Useful Guide to the Beauties in the Western Highlands of Scotland [etc.]; Murray Aust, Hon. Mrs (1811) [Combined version of the above]; ODNB (2004) (see Murray, Sarah).

B BAILLIE, Lady Grisell, n. Hume (or Home), born Redbraes Castle, Berwickshire, 25 Dec. 1665, died Mellerstain 6 Dec. 1746. Poet, household manager. Daughter of Grisell Ker, and Sir Patrick Hume, later Earl of Marchmont. In 1676, Grisell Hume, aged 11, undertook a dangerous mission when her father’s friend, Robert Baillie of Jerviswood, was fined and imprisoned in Edinburgh for rescuing his brother-in-law, the Covenanting Rev. James Kirkton, who was in trouble with the authorities. Anxious to get a message to Robert Baillie, Sir Patrick sent his daughter to Edinburgh Tolbooth, where she delivered his letters to the prisoner and met his son, George Baillie (1664–1738). After Robert Baillie was arrested again in 1683 for complicity in the Rye House Plot, Sir Patrick Hume realised that his own life was in danger and hid in the vaults of Polwarth Church, the troopers having taken possession of his castle of Redbraes. Grisell regularly brought him food, visiting him at midnight with the morsels she had concealed in her lap during her own dinner. When Robert Baillie was executed, Grisell Hume and her family, including her father, fled to Holland and settled in Utrecht, where she met George Baillie again. After the Revolution of 1688, Grisell Hume was offered but declined a position as maid of honour to Queen Mary II. In love with George Baillie, she knew that she would not see him if she were to

settle in London. Instead, she returned to Scotland and married him on 17 September 1692. Attractive, charming and an excellent businesswoman as well as a talented poet, Grisell was his wife for 46 years. They had two daughters, ‘Grisie’ (1692–1559) and Rachel, and a short-lived son. Living at Mellerstain after her marriage, she put all her father’s affairs in order and looked after her brother’s interests when he was abroad. Her husband entrusted her with the entire management of his own finances until his death in 1738. She was buried in 1746 at Mellerstain, where her famous household books have been carefully preserved. Noting in meticulous detail her household expenditure from 1692 to 1733, they provide an invaluable source for the social ­historian. rkm Grisie Baillie married Alexander Murray of Stanhope for love in 1710, but sued for separation in 1714. A London society figure, in 1721 she repelled an assault by a footman with a pistol. The resulting trial was a cause célèbre. Her memoir of her parents was published posthumously. RKM • Mellerstain: The Earl of Haddington’s Archives. Kerrigan, C. (1991) An Anthology of Scottish Women’s Poetry; Scott-Moncrieff, R. (ed.) (1911) The Household Book of Lady Grisell Baillie 1692–1733; Murray of Stanhope, G., Lady (1821) Memoirs of the Lives and Characters of the Honourable George Baillie and Lady Grisell Baillie of Jerviswood; ODNB (2004); SP; Swain, M. (1970) Historical Needlework.

23

BAILLIE

baptised Mellerstain, Berwickshire, 6 June 1822, died St Boswells, 20 Dec. 1891. First deaconess, Church of Scotland. Daughter of Mary Pringle, and George Baillie of Jerviswoode, MP for Berwickshire. Grisell Baillie grew up at Mellerstain, the Georgian great house near Gordon in the Borders. She was the youngest of 11 children, and the great-great-grand-daughter of another *Lady Grisell Baillie. Although she had many suitors and was known for her beauty, she never married. There were two significant men in her life: her brother, Robert, to whom she was a devoted companion, and Rev. Dr Archibald Charteris who established the order of deaconesses in the Church of Scotland. His vision was to recognise the gifts of women and offer them the opportunity of formal service. Grisell Baillie had covenanted with her brother to share a life of prayer and service, expressed in care for the sick and the children of the parish, raising funds for foreign missions and community improvements such as arranging for better water supplies to the village of St Boswells and for a bridge to be built over the Tweed to shorten the walking distance to church. Overcoming opposition to this new breed of women within the Church of Scotland, Grisell Baillie undertook the required training and patiently navigated Church bureaucracy until, in 1888, she was ‘set apart’ (commissioned) in Bowden Church, an occasion which she described as her ‘wedding day’ (Magnusson 1987, p. 61), becoming the first deaconess in the Church of Scotland. The Church of Scotland Woman’s Guild, also an initiative of Dr Charteris and *Catherine Morice Charteris, was formally launched in 1887 and in 1891 held its first ­conference. Lady Grisell presided, using the occasion to urge members ‘to go and work in the vineyard’ (Gordon 1912, p. 358) and to launch a campaign for temperance that would prove ­far-reaching. After her eldest brother succeeded to the title of 10th Earl of Haddington, she lived with her widowed mother and two unmarried brothers in various houses, eventually settling at Dryburgh Abbey House. She died from influenza shortly after the first Guild conference. Her charismatic character had already helped to launch a movement that would sweep Scotland in the 20th century, releasing the energy and gifts of women within the national church. at

• Gordon, Rev. A. (1912) The Life of Archibald Hamilton Charteris, DD LLD; Magnusson, M. (1987) Out of Silence ; ODNB (2004).

BAILLIE, Lady Grisell,

BAILLIE, Isobel Douglas (Isabella, Bella), CBE, DBE, m. Wrigley, born Wilton, Hawick, 9 March

1895, died Manchester 24 Sept. 1983. Singer. Daughter of Isabella Douglas, woollen factory worker, and Martin Baillie, baker. Born on the estates of the Earl of Dalkeith, Isobel Baillie moved with her family to Manchester, where she studied at the High School, taking singing lessons from the age of nine. Her voice was recognised as remarkable early on. She worked briefly as a shop assistant and clerk and, in 1917, married Henry Leonard Wrigley (1891–1957), cotton trader. They had one daughter, Nancy, born in 1918. In 1921, Isobel made her professional debut under Sir Hamilton Harty, who became her mentor, persuading her to alter her name from ‘Bella’ to ‘Isobel’, and to continue her vocal training under Guglielmo Somma in Milan (1925). She sang one of Harty’s own love songs to him from memory on his deathbed. Isobel Baillie’s first London season in 1923 was an outstanding success. She later performed regularly with Sir Thomas Beecham and Bruno Walter; Toscanini thought highly of her. She was the first British artist to sing in the Hollywood Bowl (1933). Her voice was ‘not so much personal as brightly and serenely spiritual, made by her soaring and equable tones’ (Grove’s Dict. 1961) and she specialised in oratorio, giving over a thousand performances of The Messiah, and singing the soprano solos in the Brahms Requiem and Rachmaninov’s The Bells, the latter in the composer’s presence in Sheffield in 1936. She taught singing at the RCM from 1955 to 1957, was Visiting Professor at Cornell University in 1960, and taught at Manchester College of Music. The list of her recordings is extensive, and her well-written and modest account of her singing career, Never Sing Louder than Lovely, is full of interest. Already CBE (1951), she was made DBE in 1978. jp

• Baillie, I. (1982). Work as above. (1961) Grove’s Dictionary; (2001) The New Grove Dictionary; ODNB (2004); Who’s Who in Music (1969).

born Bothwell, Lanarkshire, 11 Sept. 1762, died Hampstead, London, 23 Feb. 1851. Playwright and poet. Daughter of Dorothea Hunter, and Rev. James Baillie, Church of Scotland minister.

BAILLIE, Joanna,

24

BAILLIE

Joanna Baillie’s uncles were William and John Hunter, celebrated surgeons, anatomists and collectors. Her brother Matthew was also set for a career in medicine. She and her sister, her lifelong companion Agnes (1760–1861), were educated in the literatures and philosophies of the day, an education reflected in the tone and scope of her poetry, prose and drama. However, she showed, as she put it, an ‘uncommon dulness’ in learning to read and write, despite being ‘an active, stirring child, quick in apprehending or learning anything else’ – and remained a poor speller (SHA 1999, p. 92). She was at boarding school in Glasgow when, in 1776, her father was appointed Professor of Divinity at the University. The Baillie family moved to Glasgow, but two years later, James Baillie died and his wife and daughters moved to Long Calderwood, the Hunter estate outside Glasgow. Joanna Baillie saw her first play when at school – ‘my attention was riveted with delight’ – (ibid., p. 99) and she re-enacted scenes with fellow pupils. She also took part in dramatic episodes from Shakespeare for a family audience. In 1783, when William Hunter’s death left Matthew Baillie heir to his famous School of Anatomy on Windmill Street, London, they moved south. Shortly after the anonymous publication of Joanna Baillie’s first volume of poetry, Poems (1790) and Matthew’s marriage (1791), the female Baillies went to live in Hampstead, where they remained thereafter. They moved in the literary and intellectual circles associated with the Hunters; Joanna Baillie was close to her aunt, the poet *Anne Home Hunter (1742–1821), who ‘turned my thoughts to poetical composition’ (ibid., p. 101). Joanna Baillie published and had produced some of the key plays of the Romantic theatre and was celebrated as the pre-eminent playwright of her generation. Her first play, Arnold (1790), does not survive. Her earliest extant dramas are collected in A Series of Plays (1798). It includes Count Basil, The Trial and De Monfort, arguably her best plays, as well as the influential preface and other works of theatre theory. A second volume of plays followed in 1802; her Miscellaneous Plays in 1804 and another volume in 1812. It is on these early texts that her reputation rests. Her first produced play was De Monfort, 29 April 1800, at Drury Lane with John Philip Kemble and Sarah Siddons in the lead roles. A somewhat stilted heroic verse-tragedy, it had limited popular success, but remained in the Kemble repertoire and achieved particular success in Edinburgh as part of his farewell tour in 1817.

The city was loyal in its support of Joanna Baillie, celebrated as a Scottish woman of letters. Her friendship with Sir Walter Scott was also influential – he promoted and sponsored her work both in the Scottish capital and in London. Her work had been treated with some hostility by influential reviewers such as Francis Jeffrey – she believed this was because it was discovered that the ‘hitherto concealed Dramatist’ was a ‘private Gentlewoman of no mark or likelihood’ (ibid., p. 103). When she and her sister toured the north in 1808, they were guests of Scott in Edinburgh. Perhaps inspired by her Highland excursion, her next play was The Family Legend, which became, along with De Monfort, one of her most successful. It was produced, at the insistence of Scott, at the Theatre Royal, Edinburgh, in 1810, with *Harriet Siddons in the lead role, its heroically Ossianic tone coinciding with the patriotic mood of the city, and revived in Newcastle, in Bath (1811) and at Drury Lane. While most of Joanna Baillie’s drama is written in verse, a lively alternative is Witchcraft (1836). Like The Family Legend, it is set in Scotland and is notable for a sustained, distinctive attempt at linguistic realism. In 1836, Baillie’s drama-writing career ended with the production of The Homicide at Drury Lane and The Separation at Covent Garden. Her later works appeared in a three-volume edition of Dramas, and her final volume was Fugitive Verse (1840). Although few of her plays were performed, her literary reputation was unmatched. Her eloquent letters exemplify the intellectual society of early Romanticism. Before her death she edited her complete works, The Dramatical and Poetical Works of Joanna Baillie (1851). as • Royal College of Surgeons, London: Hunter-Baillie papers. Baillie, J., Works as above, the following, and see Bibls below, [1790] (1996) Poems, J. Wordsworth (ed.), (1789) A Series of Plays: in which it is Attempted to Delineate the Stronger Passions of the Mind, each Passion being the Subject of a Tragedy and a Comedy, (1999) The Collected Letters of Joanna Baillie, 2 vols, ed. J. B. Slagle, (2010) Further Letters of Joanna Baillie, ed. T. Maclean. Bell, B. (2007) ‘The national drama, Joanna Baillie and the National Theatre’, in Edinburgh History of Scottish Literature, vol. 2, I. Brown et al. (eds); Carhart, M. S. (1923) The Life and Works of Joanna Baillie; Duthie, P. (ed.) (2001) Plays on the Passions (1798 edition); HSWW (Bibl.); Lonsdale, R. (ed.) (1994) Eighteenth-Century Women Poets; ODNB (2004); SHA; Slagle, J. B. (2002) Joanna Baillie: a literary life (Bibl.)

25

BAIN BAIN, Margaret

see EWING, Margaret (1945–2006)

BAIRD, Matilda (May) Deans n. Tennent,

CBE, born Cambuslang 14 May 1901, died Hawick 16 Aug. 1983. Doctor and health service campaigner. Daughter of Matilda Atkinson, and Matthew Tennent, grocer. May Tennent was educated at Glasgow High School for Girls and at the University of Glasgow, from which she graduated with degrees in science and medicine. After graduation she worked as a hospital junior doctor and in 1928 married Dugald Baird (1899–1986). The couple moved to Aberdeen in 1937, when her husband was appointed Professor of Midwifery at the University. In 1938 she was elected to Aberdeen Town Council as a Socialist Party candidate, becoming Chairman of the Public Health Committee. In 1946 she was the driving force behind Aberdeen Town Council providing free birth control – one of the first places in Scotland to do so. She was elected Chairman of the North Eastern Regional Hospital Board in 1947, the first woman to hold such a post, and was a governor of the BBC in Scotland from 1966 to 1970. She campaigned for pasteurisation of milk, health education, sex education beginning in primary school, and immunisation against diphtheria. In 1949 she spoke in favour of nurses wearing a practical uniform, despite some male members of the Hospital Board favouring a ‘glamorous’ look. ‘The men might want a mannequin parade,’ said Dr Baird, ‘but we’ll leave it to their private research.’ Dugald Baird was knighted in 1959, making her Lady Baird, and she was awarded the CBE in 1962. Both she and her husband were made Free Burgesses of Aberdeen in 1966. They had four children, two of whom, *Joyce D. Baird and David T. Baird, had distinguished careers in medicine. ATM

BAIRD, Joyce Deans, m. Splitt, born Glasgow 24 June 1929, died Newcastle upon Tyne, 5 Aug. 2014. Clinician, scientist, diabetologist. Daughter of *Lady Matilda (May) Baird, n. Tennent, health service campaigner, and Sir Dugald Baird, pioneer of women’s health care. Joyce Baird obtained her MA (1949) and MB ChB (1954) from Aberdeen University. She became house physician at Edinburgh Royal Infirmary, where she was involved in clinical trials to treat diabetes, her first introduction to her later research field. There she met and in 1958 married Jack Penman Splitt, and two years later gave birth to a daughter, Miranda. As a Medical Officer with the Scottish Home and Health Department, she gained experience dealing with a range of challenging issues before returning to academic medicine at the Western General Hospital in Edinburgh, where she spent the rest of her working life. There, Joyce Baird was chosen to set up a specialist diabetes clinic. She established a Metabolic Unit, where both clinical work and research could be carried out while giving integrated care for those with diabetes and other endocrine disorders. A model for patient care, it enabled patients to manage their conditions without being hospitalised. Clinics were scheduled to fit in with school for children and work for adults. She carried out cutting-edge research into insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (Type 1 diabetes), introducing the BB rat, a unique animal model of this autoimmune disease, to the UK. She foresaw that this model, which recapitulated many of the features of human disease, could provide unique information on the pathogenesis, development of complications and treatment options for Type 1 diabetes. Joyce Baird published widely, providing seminal insights into the aetiology of Type 1 diabetes. She was highly regarded by the British Diabetic Association and internationally; she was Vice President of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes. Her political acumen enabled her to overcome institutional problems, an ability passed on to others. She was a caring mentor and friend to younger scientists and clinicians and had a truly great sense of humour, delighting in absurdities. AC o

• Aberdeen Press and Journal 17 June 1949; BMJ vol. 4, 7 24 Sept 1983, pp. 918–19; Fraser, W. H. and Lee, C. H. (eds) (2000) Aberdeen 1800–2000: a new history. BAKER, Elizabeth, n. Clendon, died Jan. or Feb. 1778. Actor and elocution teacher. Daughter of a clergyman. Elizabeth Clendon married the actor, playwright and theatre historian David Lionel Erskine Baker (1730–c.1767) in 1752. She was established in Edinburgh by March 1756, when notice was given that she would perform Juliet for Mr Aitkin’s benefit. She made her Covent Garden debut as Roxana in Nathaniel Lee’s The Rival Queens (6 Oct. 1762). She performed regularly in

• The Scotsman, 26 Aug. 1914 (obit.); Watts, G. (2014) ‘Joyce Baird’, The Lancet, 15 Nov., 384, 9,956, p. 1,742 (obit.). Personal knowledge.

26

BALFOUR

Edinburgh in the winter season of 1767–8, engaging in a protracted newspaper dispute with *Sarah Ward as to precedence on the playbills. Dibdin (1888) notes her as a member of the company from the 1769–70 season through to her retirement at the end of the 1773–4 season. She may have quit the stage after arguing with the actor manager West Digges, but thereafter – and probably before – she pursued a highly successful career as an elocution tutor for Edinburgh society. She hoped for a managerial role in Edinburgh and would have been only the second woman to achieve that – after her early rival, Sarah Ward – but she died before she could acquire the lease of the Theatre Royal, Edinburgh. Her death was marked with a verse remembrance in the Edinburgh Courant. Dr Johnson wrote of her as a friend in 1767 and actor-manager Tate Wilkinson admired her abilities. as

She duly confessed, but his promise proved false, and she was condemned to death. Relieved from torture, she immediately and publicly repudiated her admissions, repeating this both at her trial and her execution. She made a public declaration to a notary that she ‘would die as innocent of . . . wichcraft as ane barne new borne’. She defended Patrick Bellenden, saying that wax in her possession was for treating his wife’s colic. Challenged by Henry Colville, she refused to abide by her confession, made ‘aganis her saul and conscience’. She asked for the Lord’s mercy and forgiveness, then faced her end ‘constantlie’. She was executed at the ‘heading hill’ at Kirkwall. Alison Balfour seems to have been the victim of a concerted effort by Henry Colville, acting for the earl, to have John Stewart implicated in grave crimes. Witchcraft, following the North Berwick hysteria which involved *Agnes Sampson and other witches, was potentially the most damaging. At his own trial in 1596, John Stewart denied visiting Alison Balfour, and was cleared of all charges. It is likely that her deposition on the scaffold, produced at Stewart’s trial, helped to expose Henry Colville’s accusations as the falsehoods they almost certainly were. Not long afterwards, Henry Colville was murdered in Shetland, perhaps on John Stewart’s orders. pda

• Dibdin, J. C. (1888) Annals of the Edinburgh Stage ; Highfill, P. H. Jr., Burnim, K. A. and Langhans, E. A. (c. 1973–93) A Biographical Dictionary of Actors . . . and Other Stage Personnel in London, 1660–1800. BALCARRES, Anna, Countess of see MACKENZIE, Anna, Countess of Balcarres, Countess of Argyll

(1621–1707) BALFOUR, Alison, died Kirkwall 16 Dec. 1594. Healer. Executed for conspiracy to murder by witchcraft. A purveyor of simple medical remedies, Alison Balfour lived in the Ireland district of the parish of Stenness with her aged husband, surnamed Taillifeir, and her children. She became implicated in the accusations against John Stewart, Master of Orkney, that he planned to murder his brother, Patrick Stewart, the Earl. In early October, 1593, John Stewart and Patrick Bellenden of Stenness, long Earl Patrick’s enemy, were said to have visited her house to ask how ‘thay mycht haif bewichit the said . . . Erll . . . and bereif him [of life] be sorcerie and wichcraft’. In December 1594, in Kirkwall Castle under the direction of Henry Colville, parson of Orphir, she suffered ‘vehement’ torture in that mysterious instrument the caschielawis, being taken insensible from it several times over two days. Besides her torment, she witnessed her husband, said to be over 90, in the ‘lang irnis of fiftie stane wecht’, her eldest son in the ‘buitis with fiftie sevin straikis’, and even her seven-year-old daughter in the ‘pinnywinkis’ or t­ humb­screws. Henry Colville promised mercy if she co-operated.

• Anderson, P. D. (1992) Black Patie: the life and times of Patrick Stewart, Earl of Orkney, Lord of Shetland, (2012) The Stewart Earls of Orkney; Crim. Trials, vol. 1. BALFOUR, Elizabeth (Betty), n. Anderson, born on Papa Little, Shetland, 1832, died Houbanster 18 March 1918. Howdie (uncertified midwife), later known as ‘Aald Mam o’ Houbanster’. Daughter of Margaret (Maggie) Stout and Thomas (Tammy) Anderson, crofters. Aged 17, Betty Anderson married James (Jeemie) Balfour, fisherman and blacksmith: they had seven sons and four daughters. Her work as howdie was well known, and people consulted her from afar. For one delivery, Jeemie Balfour rowed her out to the island of Muckle Röe. When prolonged labour put the mother’s and the baby’s lives in danger, he used his smithing expertise to fashion forceps which she used to save them both – apparently the first such delivery in the area. Her own life was tragic: she lost three children early in marriage; a son, grandson and daughter-in-law died of consumption; one daughter died of whooping cough aged four; her son Walter drowned retrieving a lost oar, and Betty dreamed correctly where his

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body had come ashore. In 1886, her husband and two sons were lost at sea; in 1895, a grand-daughter died in a fire; four grandsons and a great-grandson were later lost at sea. After a stroke, Betty Balfour was bed-ridden for her last five years. lr

Howard’s claims. The farms were divided into plots, contrasting organic methods of production with chemically dependent methods. By 1943 enough trial evidence was available for her to publish her pioneering book The Living Soil: reprinted nine times (rev. edn. 1975), it provoked an avalanche of worldwide correspondence. Meetings with enthusiasts led directly to the formation in 1946 of the Soil Association (SA) with its aim of researching and disseminating information about organic production. Lady Eve became its first president, and the SA took over Haughley, where she worked until it closed in 1970. The postwar UK was committed to intensive agriculture and the farming establishment mocked and ignored Eve Balfour, who was however the inspiration of the modern movement for organic production, with SAs being set up worldwide. Having retired in 1984, she cultivated a large garden in Suffolk, but after a stroke returned to Scotland for her last days, receiving an OBE shortly before she died. A few days later the UK government introduced grants for organic farming. smd

• Shetland Times, 25 Dec. 1886; Tait, K. (1986) ‘Taken by the Sea’, Shetland Life, Dec., pp. 31–2. Private information: Kathleen Tait (great-great-granddaughter). Additional information, Brian Smith, archivist. BALFOUR, Lady Evelyn Barbara (Eve), OBE, born Dublin 16 July 1898, died Dunbar 14 Jan. 1990. Pioneer of organic farming, founder of the Soil Association. Daughter of Lady Elizabeth Edith Lytton, and Gerald William Balfour, 2nd Earl Balfour. Eve Balfour spent six months each year until 1915 at Whittinghame House, East Lothian, home of her uncle, A. J. Balfour, 1st Earl Balfour, prime minister (1902–5). Among her aunts were suffragists Lady Constance Lytton and *Lady Frances Balfour. Educated at home, she was strong-minded from an early age: she became a vegetarian aged eight, after watching a pheasant shoot, and decided to become a farmer after riding out one morning, aged 12, watching the wind ruffling the barley. Her parents encouraged her to read agriculture at the University of Reading in 1915, as one of the first women to do so. She ran a farm in Monmouthshire for the Women’s War Agricultural Committee, then, in 1919, she and her sister Mary bought their own farm in Haughley, Suffolk. Over the next few years, she played saxophone in a dance band, acquired a pilot’s licence, and with Beryl Hearnden published three detective novels under the pseudonym Hearnden Balfour. Her interest in what she called biological husbandry developed in the 1930s, after reading Famine in England by Lord Lymington, which alerted her to the concept of sustainable agriculture: the bee in the author’s bonnet had ‘a very interesting buzz and I really [had to] find out more about it’ (BBC Radio 4 interview, 25 August 1988). She met Sir Albert Howard, whose book Agricultural Testament argued that only healthy soil would produce the right food for human health, and Sir Robert McCarrison, an army doctor in India, who had demonstrated the direct relationship between diet and health. In 1939 with her neighbour Alice Debenham, Eve Balfour set up the Haughley Research Trust on their two farms, to undertake a long-term scientific study of McCarrison’s and

• MS biography of Eve Balfour by Charles Dowding and Mary Langham. Balfour, E. B., Work as above, and speech to Annual Meeting of International Federation of Organic Agricultural Movements, Geneva 1977. Brander, M. (2003) Eve Balfour: a biography; Conford, P. (2001) The Origins of the Organic Movement; Gill, E. (2010) ‘Lady Eve Balfour and the British organic food and farming movement’, unpublished PhD thesis, University of Aberystwyth; Griggs, B. (1986) The Food Factor; ODNB (2004); The Times, 17 Jan. 1990 (obit.) www.soilassociation.org BALFOUR, Lady Frances, n. Campbell, born Kensington 22 Feb. 1858, died London 25 Feb. 1931. Churchwoman, suffragist and writer. Daughter of Lady Elizabeth Georgiana Sutherland-LevesonGower, and Sir George Douglas Campbell, 8th Duke of Argyll. The tenth of 12 children, Lady Frances Campbell was brought up in Inveraray and Rosneath Castles, and London. She had a hip joint abnormality and from early childhood suffered constant pain and a limp. Her parents, prominent supporters of the Liberal Party, actively involved their children in social reform campaigns. In spite of initial opposition from her father, in 1879 Frances Campbell married into a well-known Conservative family. Her architect husband, Col. Eustace Balfour (1854–1911), was not active in ­politics but his uncle and brother both served

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as Prime Minister and Eustace shared their Tory views. Lady Frances was an ardent Liberal and the couple never overcame their political differences, increasingly spending time apart before his death in 1911. They had five children. It was through membership of the WLUA that Lady Frances Balfour came into contact with feminists, including Eva Maclaren, with whom she helped form the Liberal Women’s Suffrage Society (1887). She became an effective public speaker for the cause and, along with her sister-in-law Betty Balfour, tried to win the support of Arthur Balfour (Prime Minister 1902–5). She was deeply involved in the establishment and leadership of the NUWSS and was committed to their constitutional approach to campaigning. She opposed the strategy of the WSPU, although another sister-in-law, Constance Lytton, was imprisoned several times for her militant activities. ‘The courage that dares this handling I do admire. There is a fine spirit, but whether it is not rather thrown away on these tactics remains a doubt in my mind.’(Letter to Millicent Fawcett, 29 June 1909, GD433/2/295). Lady Frances was deeply involved in the Church of Scotland and an avid defender of established Protestant religion and a national Kirk. She was also the prime mover and fundraiser for the rebuilding of Crown Court Church of Scotland, London, for which her husband was architect. She served as President of the Woman’s Guild branch there, and hoped that the Guild would promote active citizenship and leadership among Christian women. She was unequivocal in her criticism of institutional religion for failing to offer equality of opportunity. Her commitment to women’s rights in church and society came together in her presidency of the Scottish Churches’ League for Woman Suffrage (formed 1912), and in her petition (posthumously heard just weeks after her death in 1931) to the General Assembly calling for the ordination of women. Lady Frances served for 15 years as President and Executive Chairwoman of the Lyceum Club, founded in 1904 to provide a welcoming and intellectually stimulating environment for women in London. She received honorary doctorates from the universities of Durham (1919) and Edinburgh (1920). In church and politics she used her prominence and connections to advantage, but found the restrictions in both spheres, with no right to speak in either the General Assembly or House of Commons, deeply frustrating. A prolific writer of articles and biographies, including *Dr Elsie Inglis (1918), in print and in speaking she combined

passion, polemic and sarcasm to great effect. Of great personal courage, vision and spirit, she confronted the male-dominated institutions to which she was most loyal, forcefully challenging their entrenched inequalities. lo • NRS: GD433/2, Balfour papers. Balfour, F., Works as above, and (1911) Lady Victoria Campbell, (1925) A Memoir of Lord Balfour of Burleigh, (1930) Ne Obliviscaris. Fleming, A. (1931) ‘Lady Frances Balfour’, St Columba’s (Church of Scotland) Magazine, March; Huffman, J. B. (1992) ‘For Kirk and Crown: the rebuilding of Crown Court Church, 1905–1909’, London Journal 17/1; Knox, W. W. J. (2006) The Lives of Scottish Women; ODNB (2004). BALFOUR, Harriet (also Schoonebeek), m. Kirke born Nickerie, Surinam c. 1818, died Nickerie 3 Dec. 1858. Freed slave. Daughter of an enslaved woman, and James Balfour, plantation owner from Dalgety, Fife. Born a slave in a Dutch colony, Harriet Balfour remained so after the emancipation of slaves in British colonies in 1834. She was freed only on her father’s death in 1841, when she was briefly given the surname Schoonebeek, later changed to Balfour. She married her first cousin, David Kirke, and travelled to Scotland where she bore two daughters, who both died young. The couple returned to Nickerie, where she had a son. She is commemorated, with her husband and children, on a Kirke family memorial at Cairneyhill, Fife. Another enslaved woman, Petronella Hendrick (1829–1917), was owned by David Kirke’s brother Robert, who freed her in 1852. She then travelled to Scotland with his family and remained with them as a servant until her death. She is described on her gravestone in Burntisland, Fife, as ‘for over 60 years the faithful and devoted nurse and friend’ of the family. Also commemorated in Burntisland graveyard is Classinda Mary Macdonald (1855–1906), born a slave on Moy plantation, Surinam, the daughter of Mary, a slave, and Gordon Macdonald of Halkirk, Caithness. She was freed in March 1858 and accompanied her father to Scotland; he died in Burntisland in 1859, and on her death in Logierait, Perthshire, in 1906, her name was added to his memorial there. da/jr

• Manumission records online, Netherlands National Archives, www.gahetna.nl/collectie/index Dikland, P. Surinam Heritage Guide, www.suriname-heritageguide.com Inverness Courier, 12 Nov. 1909; Kappler, A. (1854) Zes Jaren in Suriname.

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Between 1914 and 1919, Georgina Ballantine worked as a nurse in Perth, London and Bapaume in France, where she was decorated by the Red Cross. Later she followed her father as registrar in the parish of Caputh. Fame visited her on 7 October 1922, when she was fishing with her father, the local laird’s boatman. Using a spinning bait, Georgina Ballantine landed a 64lb salmon on the Glendelvine stretch of the River Tay, the largest recorded salmon taken from a British river with rod and line. A cast was made of the fish before it was donated to Perth Royal Infirmary and a model with supporting display is exhibited in Perth Museum. In a letter, now published online (Sandison), Ballantine records in detail the two-hour struggle to land the salmon. In 1955, an appreciative fishing syndicate had electricity installed in her riverbank home. In her later years she suffered so severely from arthritis that both legs had to be amputated. el

BALFOUR, Margaret Ida, CBE, born Edinburgh 21 April 1866, died London 1 Dec. 1945. Pioneer doctor in India. Daughter of Frances Grace Blaikie, and Robert Balfour, chartered accountant. On gaining her MBChM at Edinburgh and London in 1891, Margaret Balfour left Britain to become Medical Officer of the Zenana (women’s quarters) hospital in Ludhiana. Zenana hospitals had been established by Christian women missionaries to treat Indian women in purdah – Muslim, Hindu or Sikh – whose religion forbade them to be seen by male doctors. Margaret Balfour was Medical Superintendent of the Women’s Hospital at Nahan (1899–1902); of the Lady Dufferin Hospital in Patiala (1903–13); assistant to the Inspector-General of Civil Hospitals in the Punjab (1914–19); and finally Chief Medical Officer of all the Women’s Medical Services in India (1920–4). Having dedicated herself to improving the lifechances of Indian women and babies, she published widely on midwifery, infant and puerperal mortality in India. As an expert witness to the Joshi Committee Enquiry into child marriage in India in 1928, she drew attention to osteomalacia – softening of bones caused by the lack of sunlight in purdah – and to anaemia in pregnancy, also associated with conditions in purdah. A final ­publication, after ‘retirement’, was Maternity Conditions of Women Millworkers in Bombay (1930). Margaret Balfour also offered health visitor training to the traditional dais (midwives) who often inadvertently caused maternal and infant death. She ended her working life as an unpaid octogenarian ARP medical officer in wartime London. ‘Beneath her quiet manner and gentle voice there was a core of steel’ (Scott 1946). She received the Kaiser-IHind medal (1920) and was made CBE (1924). so

• Dunkeld Cathedral Archives: Bell, F. R., ‘Diary of a Quiet Life’, typescript, n.d. Paterson, W. and Behan, P. (1990) Salmon and Women: the feminine angle; Sandison, B. ‘Georgina Ballantine’, see www. wildfisher.co.uk (retrieved 24 Jan. 2017).

m. Graham, born Glasgow 1 Dec. 1898, died Glasgow 21 Feb. 1959. Actor. Daughter of Elizabeth Lochhead, and Peter Ballantyne, dairyman. Nell Ballantyne grew up in Stirlingshire, where her parents had a farm. In 1918 she went to RADA and, on graduation in 1921, became one of the first members of the Scottish National Players, making extensive tours throughout Scotland with the pioneering company. The company’s activities were usually conducted on a shoestring, the actors often living under canvas between engagements. According to Tyrone Guthrie, the company’s producer, she would usually do the cooking. In 1925 she married Robert McGregor Graham, manufacturer’s agent, and they had a daughter in 1929. They later divorced. Always a utility player rather than a leading actress, she is remembered more for her sunny personality than for her gifts as a performer. The broadcaster Howard M. Lockhart remarked that it was impossible to feel depressed in her company and another colleague, Tom Fleming, told of her popularity in the Gateway company, which she later joined. Nevertheless, her gifts as an actress were not negligible. Her most famous stage role was as Mrs Gellatly in the world premiere of John Brandane’s The Glen is Mine (25 Jan. 1923) but she

BALLANTYNE, Nellie Lochhead (Nell),

• Wellcome Library, London, Archives and manuscripts: Correspondence of Margaret Ida Balfour, ref PP.MIB, acquired 2013. Balfour, M., Work as above and (1929) Balfour, M. and Young, R., The Work of Medical Women in India. The Lancet, 15 Dec. 1945 (obit.); Oldfield, S. (2001) Women Humanitarians; Pollock, J. C. (1958) Shadows Fall Apart ; Rathbone, E. (1929) Child-Marriage ; Scott, A. (1946) ‘Dr. M. Balfour’, Medical Women’s Federation Quarterly Rev., Jan. (obit.). BALLANTINE, Georgina White,‡ born Caputh 25 Nov. 1889, died Caputh 12 April 1970. Nurse, ­registrar, salmon fisher. Daughter of Christina White, and James Ballantine, registrar and ghillie.

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became best known for her parts in two radio soap operas. In 1941 she played the mother in the BBC’s first series of this kind, Front Line Family, and six years later she was the original Mrs McFlannel in the fondly remembered The McFlannels. In addition to her stage and radio work, she appeared in several films: The Shipbuilders (1943), Bonnie Prince Charlie (1948), Mr Emmanuel (1949), Laxdale Hall (1953), Rockets Galore (1958) and The Bridal Path (1959). dc

spell as press officer for Edinburgh Zoo – and The Windswept Isles: Shetland and its people (1977). After her husband’s death, she moved to Cullen, where she continued to paint. Unsurprisingly perhaps, she was described as ‘Action Woman’ in a Scotsman article (2002). SM • Film archive in NLS-MIA and BFI; paintings in Shetland Museum and Archives. Balneaves, E., Works as above. The Herald, 10 Nov. 2006 (obit.); The Scotsman, 9 Feb. 2002. BALTACHA, Elena (Bally), born

Kiev, Ukraine, 14 Aug. 1983, died Ipswich, 4 May 2014. Professional tennis player. Daughter of Olga Belaus, pentathlete, and Sergei Baltacha, footballer. Elena Baltacha moved with her family to the UK at age five, living initially in Ipswich and then Perth. She began her tennis career in Scotland in 1997, reaching 49th in the world rankings in 2010, and was number one for British women’s tennis for a total of nearly three years. She reached the third round of Wimbledon in 2002, the third round of the Australian Open in 2005 and 2010, and won 11 singles titles. In 2010 she established the Elena Baltacha Academy of Tennis, based in Ipswich, to encourage children, especially girls, to get involved with tennis. She retired from the sport in 2013 and married her coach Nino Severino. After managing asevere liver condition for much of her adult life, she was diagnosed with liver cancer in January 2014, and died in May. The Elena Baltacha Foundation was then established to ensure the Academy was maintained. The Foundation and Academy continue her legacy today, with Academy coaches visiting schools throughout the UK to provide tennis opportunities for British children. EM

• Royal Conservatoire of Scotland: GB 2607 NB001-158 Nell Ballantyne Photographic Archive. Campbell, D. (1965) Six Seasons of the Edinburgh Gateway, (1996) Playing for Scotland; Glasgow Herald, 21 Feb. 1959 (obit.). Private information: Helen Murdoch. BALLIOL, Dervorgilla

(c. 1213–1290)

see GALLOWAY, Dervorgilla of

BALNEAVES, Elizabeth (Betty), m. Johnston, born Aberdeen 24 Sept. 1911, died Elgin 7 Nov. 2006. Writer, film-maker, painter. Daughter of Annie Edmiston Watt, and Alexander Balneaves, headmaster. After graduating from Gray’s School of Art (1933), Elizabeth Balneaves married forensic psychiatrist James Johnston, of Shetland descent. They settled in Edinburgh and had four children. Having separated from Johnston in 1948, she travelled extensively, becoming head of the Art and Crafts Department of the University of Punjab and associate editor of the Pakistan Review, and writing and illustrating The Waterless Moon (1955). Peacocks and Pipelines (1958) recounted her travels from Baluchistan to Bihar. Following her remarriage to Johnston, who supported her travels, the couple moved to Shetland in 1960. With the assistance of her son Stewart, Elizabeth Balneaves made several films in Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia), exploring human impact on the environment, including The Kariba Dam (1960) and The Aardvark or Antbear (1961). Her book Elephant Valley (1962) was about the game and tsetse control officer Joe McGregor Brooks. Further travel to East Pakistan/Bangladesh led to filming Where Water is Life (1963) and Logging in the Sundarbans (1963). With *Jenny Gilbertson, Elizabeth Balneaves filmed BBC1’s People of Many Lands – The Edge of Britain: Shetland (1967), and went on to write The Mountains of the Murgha Zerin (1972), a novel Murder in the Zoo (1974) – inspired by a

• The Guardian, 21 Dec. 2014 (obit.); www.bbc.co.uk/sport/ tennis/27280549; www.elenabaltachafoundation.org

born before 1567, died Aberdeen 25 March 1597. Midwife. Margaret Bane, a midwife of Lumphanan parish, Aberdeenshire, was accused of witchcraft, sorcery, enchantment and murder in 1597, when she was probably about 55 years old. She may have married twice, as she had a daughter, Helen Rogie, and a son, Duncan Gardyn. At least eight women tried for witchcraft in 1597 named her as an accomplice. Evidence at her trial indicates that she was consulted widely for advice about childbirth, and her knowledge of midwifery was used as evidence against her. In a typical incident, it was claimed she transferred the labour pains of a woman to her

BANE (or CLERK), Margaret,

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husband, and that he died as a result. Margaret Bane confessed to some of the items, notably that she had predicted the birth of a male child and that she and her sister, Janet Spaldarge (d. 1597), had caused the death of a man. She also confessed that Janet had taught her witchcraft, and that she had become the devil’s servant. Other witnesses claimed that she was seen carrying out a ritual at a loch, when she had thrown water, earth and stones over her shoulders. The records indicate that Margaret Bane had been charged 30 years earlier but had not appeared and had remained fugitive from the law. She may have had influence over some people involved in her trials, as it was claimed that she managed to be cleansed (‘clengit’) of charges brought against her in 1596. She may also have had friends in high places, as Lady Ross of Auchlossan paid 10 merks to the clerks to hide the previous dittay (charge). She was eventually tried at Aberdeen in March 1597, found guilty and executed by burning. Margaret Bane’s association with her sister Janet, burnt for witchcraft in Edinburgh, and others, was a significant element in the verdict, as were the accusations of demonic involvement and malefice (evil harm). However, her midwifery practices and other behaviour were also important. Her daughter, Helen Rogie, was also tried and executed for witchcraft a month after her. jhmm

modern Gothic ballads popularised by writers such as Matthew Lewis, author of The Monk (1796). The critical reception was more mixed, many reviewers disapproving of the supernatural horror her work evoked, increasingly thought inappropriate for women poets. Anne Bannerman’s mother’s death in 1803 left her impoverished. She published a new edition of her poems by subscription (1807), including some new works, such as ‘To Miss Baillie,’ a tribute to *Joanna Baillie, whom she admired, but sales were insufficient to give her an annuity. She obtained £20 from the Royal Literary Fund in 1805, and became a governess in Exeter in 1807. By the early 1810s, she was back in Scotland, existing at least partially through charitable gifts. In 1824 she visited *Anne Grant. She died an invalid and in debt. ac • NLS: MSS 971, 3380–2 (Leyden MSS); 22.4.10 and 22.3.11. Bannerman, A., Works as above and (1807) Poems, new edn. Craciun, A. (2003) Fatal Women of Romanticism, (2004) ‘Romantic spinstrelsy: Anne Bannerman and the sexual politics of the ballad’ in L. Davis, I. Duncan, J. Sorensen (eds) Scotland and the Borders of Romanticism; *ODNB (2004) (Bibl.) BANNERMAN, Helen Brodie Cowan, n. Watson, born Edinburgh 25 Feb. 1862, died Edinburgh 13 Oct. 1946. Children’s writer. Daughter of Jane Cowan, and Rev. Robert Boog Watson. From 1864, Helen Watson lived in Madeira, where her father, a scientist as well as a minister, taught his seven children. In 1874, the family returned to Edinburgh, where she went to school. She later took an external university degree (LLA St Andrews 1887), and studied languages and philology in Hanover and Italy. In 1889, she married William Burney Bannerman (1858–1924), a doctor in the Indian Medical Service, and spent the next 30 years in India. She first invented stories to comfort her two small daughters, whom she had to leave at a hill station for the hot season while she stayed with her husband in Madras. In 1898, she sent them The Story of Little Black Sambo, written, illustrated and bound by her. The next year Sambo was published in London, and became an immediate and enormous success. It contains all the ingredients to appeal to small children: a boy hero who outwits four hungry tigers in the Indian jungle, excitement, suspense and a satisfying ending. Short, repetitive sentences are perfectly synchronised with simple bright pictures in a small format, predating Peter Rabbit by two years as the first picture-story for young children. The author’s lack of copyright

• Stuart, J. (ed.) (1841–52) Spalding Club Miscellany, vol. 1, pp. 140, 145–7, 153–6, 158, 160, 193; Ibid., vol. 5, p. 67. BANNERMAN, Anne, born Edinburgh 31 Oct. 1765, died Portobello 29 Sept. 1829. Poet. Daughter of Isobel Dick, and William Bannerman, a ‘running stationer’ (street ballad singer and seller). Anne Bannerman excelled in the Scottish ballad tradition. Her two collections of poetry, Poems (1800) and Tales of Superstition and Chivalry (1802), established her as a highly original Scottish poet, appreciated by influential editors such as Bishop Percy, John Leyden (possibly a romantic interest), Dr Robert Anderson, and Walter Scott. Scott praised this ‘gifted lady’s’ poetry in his ‘Essay on Imitations of the Ancient Ballad’ (1830, quoted Henderson 1902, pp. 16–17), saying it was ‘peculiarly fit to be read in a lonely house by a decaying lamp’. Her first volume included an impressive set of visionary poems (e.g. ‘The Genii’ and ‘Ode: The Spirit of the Air’) in which the poet assumed the sublime voice thought typical of male Romantic poets, an accomplishment praised by contemporaries. In Tales of Superstition, she concentrated on

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resulted in a flood of unauthorised American versions with stereotypical illustrations. These, along with the name Sambo and the original drawings, increasingly contributed to charges of racism, particularly from the 1970s. A new edition, retaining the engaging story but with name-changes, Little Black Babaji, (1997) later appeared, though the original remains popular and in print. Helen Bannerman produced a series of similar but less successful picture books, the last one in 1937. In 1918, the Bannermans returned to live with their four children in Edinburgh. JRR

November 1915, the strike culminated in a huge demonstration. Thousands of women, supported by engineers and shipyard workers, marched to the sheriff court near Candleriggs, inspired by rousing speeches from Helen Crawfurd, John Maclean and William Gallacher – who called the women ‘Mrs Barbour’s Army’ (Gallacher 1936, p. 55). As a result, the Rent Restrictions Act 1915 came into force and Mary Barbour ‘became a Govan legend’ (McShane 1978, p. 75). In June 1916, with Helen Crawfurd and *Agnes Dollan, Mary Barbour took part in the founding of the Women’s Peace Crusade. In 1920 she stood as Labour Party candidate for Fairfield ward, Govan, and swept in on the new women’s vote as one of the first Labour women councillors in Glasgow. Devoting her energies to improving women’s daily lives, she successfully established municipal baths, wash-houses, laundries and crèches, play areas and free school milk for children. Supported by Dr Norah Wattie, she campaigned for victims of TB and founded the Women’s Welfare and Advisory Clinic in September 1926, the first family planning clinic for married women in Glasgow, staffed by women doctors and nurses. She served on Glasgow Corporation as the first woman bailie (1924–27) and was one of Glasgow’s first woman magistrates. After her retirement in 1931, she continued to be active in the GHA and in the SCWG. A true pioneering leader on Clydeside, she was held in high regard by her local community. ac a

• NLS: Dep. 325: Bannerman family letters from India to Edinburgh (17 vols 1902–17, incl. watercolour illustrations); Acc. 7690: script 1971 BBC radio programme based on letters; Acc. 8884: Sketch book and printed text, Sambo and the Twins (1937). Bannerman, H., Works as above; Little Black Babaji (1997, ill. F. Marcellino). Arbuthnot, M. H. (1957) Children and Books; Hay, E. (1981) Sambo Sahib; ODNB (2004, Bibl.); Tucker, N. (ed.) (1976) Suitable for Children? Controversies in Children’s Literature.

n. Rough, born Kilbarchan, Renfrewshire, 20 Feb. 1875, died Govan, Glasgow, 2 April 1958. Housing and Labour activist and councillor. Daughter of Jane (Jeanie) Gavin, and James Rough, carpet weaver. The third of seven children, Mary Rough began work aged 12 as a thread twister in Elderslie. In 1896, when she was a carpet printer, she married David Barbour (1873–1957), an engineer from Johnstone. They settled in Govan, where he worked in Fairfield Shipbuilding & Engineering Company, and had two sons. She joined the ILP and was involved in her local Socialist Sunday School and the Kinning Park CWG. In 1914, the GWHA was set up by the Glasgow Labour Party Housing Committee and after a series of steep rent rises by landlords, housewives spontaneously refused to pay the increases. By June 1915, effective and organised resistance had developed, particularly in Govan, after the formation of the South Govan WHA, led by Mary Barbour. She organised women’s committees who met in kitchens and closes to gather information on impending evictions. By ringing hand-bells and ‘ricketies’ (rattles) they alerted the women, who came out on to the streets to drive off the sheriff ’s officers. The rent strike spread to other areas; in Partick, Jean Ferguson also led and organised an effective campaign, while *Helen Crawfurd, Secretary of the GWHA, provided overall leadership, speaking at mass rallies. On 17

BARBOUR, Mary,‡

• NLS: Mary Barbour collection. Election Address, Fairfield Ward, Govan, 2 Nov. 1920; Crawfurd, H. (n.d.) Unpublished Autobiography (copy also in Marx Memorial Library, London); Rent Strikes history; Mitchell Library, Glasgow: Govan Press 22 Oct.–5 Nov. 1920, 11 April 1958 (obit.); Glasgow Bulletin 23 Jan. 1918. Gallacher, W. (1936) Revolt on the Clyde ; Horne, R. (1972) ‘The great rents victory’, Scottish Marxist, 2; McShane, H. (1978) No Mean Fighter ; Melling, J. (1983) Rent Strikes 1890–1916; *ODNB (2004); Sheffield Film Cooperative (1984) Red Skirts on Clydeside (Scottish Film Archive); Smyth, J. (1980) ‘Working Class Women in Glasgow during the First World War’, Diss., Univ. of Glasgow, (1992) ‘Rents, Peace, Votes – Working class women and political activity in the First World War’, in E. Gordon and E. Breitenbach (eds) Out of Bounds: Women in Scottish Society 1800–1945. Private information (Mary Barbour, grand-daughter).

MBE, born Glasgow, 5 March 1883, died Paisley, 15 July 1975.

BARCLAY, Williamina McIntosh,

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Nurse who helped evacuate St Kilda. Daughter of Jessie Maxwell, and Andrew Barclay, engineer. After qualifying as a state registered nurse at Glasgow Royal Infirmary in 1922, Williamina Barclay trained as a midwife in Dundee and a district nurse in Glasgow. She had been a Queen’s Nurse for over five years when she was offered the post of nurse on St Kilda in March 1928. Though shocked by the conditions there, she built a relationship with the islanders and her abilities were respected by the Scottish Department of Health officials to whom she reported. Her observations on the islanders’ inability to follow traditional farming practices, and the declining number of able-bodied men, were influential in leading senior civil servants to suggest evacuation. In April 1930, over tea with the islanders, she raised the question of evacuation; later she assisted the islanders in drawing up a petition asking for assistance to leave. In June 1930 she was appointed the government’s representative on the island. Her responsibilities included helping to plan the evacuation and aiding the future settlement of thirty-six St Kildans, including the disposal and sale of their sheep. On 29 Aug. 1930 she sailed in HMS Harebell with the islanders to Lochaline in Argyll, where most were to make their home. She visited all the islanders after the move, finding some disillusioned and in difficulties, and reported on them to the Department of Health. Among those settled in Lochaline, with her family, was the young girl who was to be the last survivor of St Kilda, Rachel Johnson n. Gillies (1922–2016). Williamina Barclay was awarded the MBE in 1931. JR

Margaret, and was courted by, but refused, Henry Dundas, Secretary of State for War in Pitt’s first administration. In 1793, she married Andrew Barnard, son of Thomas, Bishop of Limerick: he was 28 and she 43. Andrew Barnard, with Dundas’s patronage, was appointed colonial secretary to the Cape of Good Hope. He died at the Cape in 1807 and Lady Anne spent the rest of her life in London. Lady Anne became famous for her ballad ‘Auld Robin Gray’, but her letters and journals may prove her most enduring monument. She explains the ballad’s beginnings in a song sung by an eccentric family friend, Sophia Johnston (c. 1730–c. 1810), in a letter to Sir Walter Scott, 8 July 1823. Before this, her composition was a family secret. ‘Auld Robin Gray’ tells the story of Jenny, who, believing her lover, Jamie, to have been lost at sea, marries an aged suitor, Robin Gray, to help support her straitened family. Jamie returns after the wedding: Jenny and he meet tenderly and part. The song gives us a movingly stoical speaker, aware of the realities of female lives. Unfortunately, two sentimental continuations followed; in the second, Robin Gray gives his deathbed blessing to the young couple who marry and live happily at last. Lady Anne’s letters to Henry Dundas from South Africa are those of a private individual writing to a great public figure; much of her tolerant advice was good policy. Her letters to her sisters are more social but they too contain precise observation. There are also extensive diaries and journals from the Cape and a journal of her early family life. A volume of poetry by Lady Anne and her sisters, Lady Elizabeth Hardwicke and Lady Margaret Burges (Fordyce), Lays of the Lindsays, was originally intended for the Bannatyne Club but withdrawn by Scott at the ladies’ request and replaced by one which contained only ‘Auld Robin Gray’ and its continuations. Lady Anne’s awareness of the opinion that it was shameful and presumptuous for women to publish poetic compositions probably inhibited her real talent, if we judge from the first, tough, version of ‘Auld Robin Gray’. As it is, we may wonder that the woman who could tell Henry Dundas what he ought to do, hesitated to tell anyone that she had written a song. DAM c M

• NRS: AF57/26, 36, 48–51, HH65/21–3, DD15/4/1–7. Hutchison, R. (2014) St Kilda: a people’s history; Supplement to The London Gazette, 30 Dec. 1930; The Scotsman, 7 April 2016 (obit.); Steel, T. (1975, updated 2011) The Life and Death of St Kilda: the moving story of a vanished island community. BARLASS, Kate

see DOUGLAS, Katherine (fl. 1437)

BARNARD, Lady Anne‡, n. Lindsay,

born Balcarres, Fife, 27 Nov. 1750, died London 6 May 1825. Writer of songs, journals and letters. Daughter of Anne Dalrymple of Castleton, and James Lindsay, 5th Earl of Balcarres. The eldest of eleven children, Anne Lindsay spent her childhood in Fife. The family often spent the winter in Edinburgh, where Lady Anne was admitted to a social circle which included David Hume, Henry Mackenzie and Lord Monboddo. She moved to London to live with her sister,

• NLS: Crawford and Balcarres papers Barnard, A., Works as above and see HSWW (Bibl.). Anderson, W. (1863) The Scottish Nation; Barker, N. (ed.) (2009) Lady Anne Barnard’s Watercolours and Sketches; Burman, J. (1990) In the Footsteps of Lady Anne Barnard; Elwood, A. K. C. (1843) Memoirs of the Literary Ladies of England; Fairbridge, D. (1924) Lady Anne Barnard at the

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sudden change of direction when she was spotted by the BBC and took part in a programme called Town Forum. Immediately popular, she became one of the four original panellists on the long-running television quiz series, What’s My Line? from 1953 to 1963. With her ladylike manner, elegance and intelligence, she became a national celebrity on the emerging medium of television. As well as having a natural character for broadcasting, adaptable and witty, Isobel Barnett drew attention to herself because of her chic dress style and dramatic jewellery (almost stage props), large bangles, brooches and necklaces. She also wrote books, some for children, worked on radio, and was a sought-after guest speaker and bazaar opener. She served as a magistrate and JP. Latterly much out of the spotlight, she was convicted in 1980 for a very minor shop-lifting offence, and committed suicide a few days later. ls

Cape of Good Hope, 1797–1802; Lindsay, A. C. (1849) Lives of the Lindsays; Masson, M. (1948) Lady Anne Barnard; Mills, G. M. (1950) First Ladies of the Cape ; ODNB (2004); Taylor, S. (2016) Defiance: the life and choices of Lady Anne Barnard. BARNETT, Euphemia Cowan, DSc, born Aberdeen 2 Dec. 1890, died Aberdeen 12 March 1970. Botanist. Daughter of Elizabeth A. I. Mustard, teacher, and James Barnett, headmaster. Euphemia Barnett was educated at Aberdeen High School for Girls and the University of Aberdeen. After graduating with a BSc in 1918 she worked as an assistant, first to Professor James Trail and then Professor William G. Craib, for seven years. The latter was known for his pioneering study of the flora of Thailand. Barnett moved to the botany department of the West of Scotland College of Agriculture, which included carrying out laboratory work for the Royal Botanic Gardens, Edinburgh. In 1930 she returned to Aberdeen to lecture in the School of Pharmacy, Robert Gordon’s College. While there she studied for her DSc at the University of Aberdeen and graduated in 1940. During the Second World War she took part in a study of nettles for classified war purposes. In 1945 she became Head of Biology at the College of Education, Aberdeen. After she retired, the University of Aberdeen awarded her a Research Fellowship to develop her research on Thai flora, building on the earlier work of Professor Craib. The genus Barnettia was named after her. In later life she lived with her younger sister, Elizabeth, one of the first two women to graduate in law from the University of Aberdeen. Her obituary was written by her friend *Nan Shepherd. ATM

• Barnett, I. (1956) My Life Line, (1965) Exploring London, Shell Junior Guide; Barnett, I. and Meadows, J. (1972) Lady Barnett’s Quiz Book: let’s have a quiz. Gallagher, J. (1982) Isobel Barnett, Portrait of a Lady. BARNS-GRAHAM, Wilhelmina (Willie), m. Lewis, CBE,

born St Andrews 8 June 1912, died Dundee 26 Jan. 2004. Painter. Daughter of Wilhelmina Bayne Meldrum, and Allan Barns-Graham, landowner. Wilhelmina Barns-Graham grew up in St Andrews, the eldest child in a minor landed family. Her father opposed her childhood wish to be an artist and only the intervention of her maternal aunt, Mary Niesh, enabled her to attend Edinburgh College of Art from 1931. Her work flourished under the influence of tutors such as William Gillies and John Maxwell. In 1940, having travelled on a scholarship to St Ives, she remained there, working with Ben Nicholson and Barbara Hepworth, and taking a full part in the creativity and politics of its modernist artistic community, being ‘at the heart of one of the most innovative movements in art’ in Britain (Green 2001, p. 274). Willie Barns-Graham developed as an abstract painter, always willing to experiment, and fascinated by mixing abstract and figurative forms. She did not, however, at that time gain the reputation which was later seen as deserved, being overshadowed by other, usually male, St Ives artists. She married writer David Lewis (b. 1922) in 1949, but the marriage broke down, ending in 1963. Willie Barns-Graham had inherited Balmungo estate near St Andrews from her supportive Aunt Mary in 1960 and began dividing her time between the Fife coast in winter and the Cornish coast in

• AUL: Barnett archive, GB 0231 MS2989. Shepherd, N. (1970) ‘Euphemia C. Barnett (BSc 1918, DSc)’, Aberdeen University Review, 43, pp. 442–3 (obit.).

n. Marshall, born Aberdeen 30 June 1918, died Loughborough 20 Oct. 1980. Doctor and broadcaster. Daughter of Jane Minty, and Robert McNab Marshall, medical practitioner. Isobel Marshall grew up in Glasgow, attending Laurel Bank School. She excelled as an athlete and made a name for herself in sporting circles there and at the University of Glasgow, where she qualified as a doctor in 1940. In 1941 she married Geoffrey Barnett, later Lord Mayor of Leicester, who was knighted in 1953. Isobel Barnett’s career took a

BARNETT, Isobel Morag, Lady,

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summer. By the late 1970s, renewed attention was focused on the St Ives artists, but a major exhibition at the Tate (1985) gave only a small place to Barns-Graham. The retrospective solo exhibition organised by the City of Edinburgh Museums and Galleries (1989) marked the first significant reconsideration of her career, and the start of a period in which her work received much more critical attention and several major exhibitions. She produced some of her most confident, colourful and admired work in the last years of her long life, when the first major monograph was devoted to her (Green 2001/2011), and there is now a trust in her name. FJ

served in Clydebank (1943–55) during and after the ravages of war. She was minister of Glasgow Central UFC, Anderston, 1955–68. In 1966, she also took on Miller Memorial Church, Maryhill, and remained there until her retirement in 1975. In 1960 she was Moderator of the UFC General Assembly: an appointment of symbolic importance during the 400th Anniversary of the Reformation in Scotland. She herself said: ‘men and women are one in Christ, and we do wrong to separate them in describing the life, work and witness of the Church’ (Thomson 1965, p. 4). lo • Barr, E. B. (1960–1) ‘A woman looks at the ministry’, Reformed and Presbyterian World, 26. *ODNB (2004); Thomson, D. P. (ed.) (1965) Women in Ministry (pamphlet); UFC, Stedfast Magazine 1960–1, 1995.

• Gooding, M. (2005) Wilhelmina Barns-Graham: movement and light imag(in)ing time [exhib. catalogue Tate St Ives]; Green, L. (2001 and 2011) W. Barns-Graham: a studio life, (2012) Wilhelmina Barns-Graham: a Scottish artist at St Ives [exhib. catalogue, Edinburgh]; The Guardian, 29 Jan. 2004 (obit.); Gunn, A. (2007) The Prints of Wilhelmina BarnsGraham: a complete catalogue; eODNB; The Scotsman, 2 Feb. 2004 (obit.); W. Barns-Graham: retrospective 1940–1989, exhib. catalogue, 1989, intro. by D. Hall; Wilhelmina BarnsGraham: an enduring image, exhib. catalogue, 2000. www.barns-grahamtrust.org.uk/The-Artist

BARR, Isabel see NEWSTEAD, Isabel

(1955–2007)

born Margaret Bulkley, Dublin c. 1789, died London 25 July 1865. Army medical officer and reformer. Daughter of Mary Ann Bulkley, and Jeremiah Bulkley, grocer. Margaret Bulkley grew up in Dublin and possibly bore a child as a result of rape around the age of 13. Her father’s financial ruin led her mother, Mary Ann Bulkley, to appeal to her London-based artist brother, James Barry, for help in maintaining the family. Barry’s death intestate in 1806, and the patronage of his friends the Earl of Buchan and the radical Venezuelan General Francisco Miranda, apparently allowed the child formerly known as Margaret Bulkley to transform her sexual identity and future prospects in registering for a medical degree at the University of Edinburgh in 1809 in the name of Jacobus (James) Barry, with a birth date of 1799. Under the same name, in 1812 Barry submitted a dissertation to Edinburgh, and after further study at Guy’s and St Thomas’s Hospitals, London, passed the army medical board examination, then giving a birth date of 1795. James Barry’s outstanding and controversial career in military medicine, in spite of a slight physique and dandyish appearance, has been frequently related. In 1816, posted to the Cape Colony, Dr Barry became physician to the Governor-General, Lord Charles Somerset, forming a friendship with him that survived ridicule and sexual rumours. As Colonial Medical Inspector from 1822, Dr Barry undertook an extensive programme of medical reform in Cape Town, performing a rarely achieved successful Caesarean section there in July 1826. From April 1831, Dr Barry served in the West Indies,

BARRY, James,

BARR, Rev. Elizabeth Brown, born Glasgow 2 Oct. 1905, died Glasgow 23 June 1995. United Free Church of Scotland minister. Daughter of Martha Stephen, and James Barr, UFC minister and Labour MP. Educated at Bellahouston Academy, Glasgow, Elizabeth Brown Barr graduated MA from the University of Glasgow in 1925. She qualified as a primary school teacher, starting work at Wolseley Street School in 1926. Influenced in her formative years by the traditions and ethos of the United Free Church (UFC), at university she was a member of the Student Christian Movement (SCM), which fostered progressive Christian social ideals, including a measure of gender equality. In 1929, a minority of UFC members (led by James Barr) chose not to enter into union with the established Church of Scotland, and in 1930 the UFC (Continuing) passed a resolution that any member in full communion was eligible to hold any office. For the first time in Britain, ordination to eldership and ministry was open to women in a Presbyterian church. Elizabeth Brown Barr was encouraged to consider this path, and although others urged her to take a ‘saner view’ she was accepted as a candidate for ministry. She graduated BD and was licensed to preach on 12 September 1933. After ministering in rural Auchterarder (1935–43), she

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St Helena and Malta, and in 1855 ­successfully treated sick and injured soldiers from the Crimea in Corfu, before travelling to inspect the Scutari hospital (and administer a scolding to Florence Nightingale). Posted to Canada as Inspector General of Hospitals in 1857, Dr Barry returned to England for health reasons in 1859. After Barry’s death in London, the sensational evidence of the woman who laid out the body, stating that it was female, was immediately circulated, but remains uncertain. James Barry, or Margaret Bulkley, has appealed to successive generations of historians, novelists, dramatists and film directors, some emphasising Barry’s Scottish training. One view identifies James Barry with a lengthy tradition of women who cross-dressed in order to take up a demanding career otherwise closed to them. It has also been argued that James Barry had intersexual or hermaphrodite characteristics. And Barry has most recently been located within a history of transgendered and queer identities. James Barry’s presence in this dictionary may be thought marginal, for the brevity of the Scottish connection (though he/ she is often numbered among Scots) and for indeterminate sexual identity. But this remarkable life is a reminder of the fluidity of such definitions. It seems likely that the child brought up as Margaret Bulkley chose to live as a male doctor, scientist and humanitarian reformer. JR

aspects of ­production, from cooking to machinery repairs and the management of workers. She tried out new recipes, looking for better ways to preserve the flavour in canned and bottled products. Her Royal Game soup, created in 1929, became one of the company’s best-known products. Under Ethel and William Baxter’s direction, the company’s product range expanded and was sold to leading London stores Harrods and Fortnum and Mason, then to America and throughout the British Empire. In 1952, Ena Baxter, n. Robertson (1924–2015), wife of Gordon Baxter, joined the firm, and with her husband greatly developed the range of soups, including their famous Cock-a-Leekie and Cullen Skink. Gordon Baxter is said to have remarked: ‘When Mrs Heinz is buying French Impressionists, Mrs Baxter is in the kitchen making soup’, as featured in their successful TV advertisements. FJ/SR • ‘Recipe for a Food Giant’, in Scottish Memories, Sept. 1997; Bennett, S. et al. (eds) (2012) Women of Moray; (1980) Baxters of Speyside; ODNB (2004) (see Baxter, W. A.); The Telegraph, 20 Jan. 2015 (obit. Ena Baxter); WoM; www.baxters.com BAXTER, Evelyn Vida, MBE, born Upper Largo, Fife, 29 March 1879, died Upper Largo 1 Oct. 1959. Ornithologist. Daughter of Mary Constance MacPherson, and John Henry Baxter. Fascinated by birds, Evelyn Baxter wrote her first essay, ‘The Redstart’, as a child. Although lacking scientific training, she and her lifelong friend Leonora Jeffrey Rintoul (1875–1953) made recording visits to the Isle of May, where they gathered the first records of rare warblers. Observing resident and migratory birds, they revolutionised bird migration theory by relating it to weather patterns. Their monumental co-authored classic, The Birds of Scotland, compiled between 1905 and 1952, included details of species, varieties, habitat and frequency of indigenous and migratory birds. The two women helped establish the Scottish Ornithologists’ Club in 1938, becoming joint Presidents. Throughout the Second World War, Evelyn Baxter worked on the Fife Committee of the Woman’s Land Army. A lifelong interest was the SWRI, for which she travelled across Scotland, giving talks and demonstrations: a scholarship has been established in her name. Her boundless energy was also displayed as ‘skip’ of a Ladies’ Curling Club for fifty years. She was made MBE in 1945, LLD University of Glasgow in 1955, and was the recipient of the British Ornithologists’ Union Award in 1959. ls

• Holmes, R. (2002) Scanty Particulars: the life of Dr James Barry; Kubba, A. K. and Young, M. (2001) ‘The Life, Work and Gender of Dr James Barry’, Proc. Roy. Coll. Phys. Edin. 31, pp. 352–6; ODNB (2004); du Preez, M. and Dronfield, J. (2016), Dr James Barry: a woman ahead of her time (Bibl.) BAXTER, Etheldreda (Ethel), n. Adam, born Roseisle, Moray 22 Oct. 1883, died Elgin 16 August 1963. Businesswoman and cook. Daughter of Elizabeth Farquhar, and Andrew Adam, ­ploughman. Ethel Adam was the second of a line of Baxter women whose initiative and skills helped to create the internationally known food company. Born on a farm and trained as a nurse, on 11 November 1914 she married a patient, William A. Baxter ­(1877–1973). His mother, Margaret Baxter (n. Duncan, 1852–81), and her husband George had a grocery shop in Fochabers, which sold Margaret’s renowned jams and marmalades. Ethel Baxter saw the opportunity to expand, and persuaded her husband to borrow money to open a factory in 1916. While William travelled as a salesman, Ethel worked in the kitchens. She was involved in all

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it was a real and manifest pleasure for her to give’ (Dundee Courier 1884). When she died, she still had a quarter of a million pounds to leave to her nephew. imh

• Baxter, E. V. and Rintoul, L. J. (1928) The Geographical Distribution and Status of Birds in Scotland, (1935) A Vertebrate Fauna of the Forth, (1953) The Birds of Scotland. Their History, Distribution and Migration. Eggeling, W. J. (1985) The Isle of May.

• Baxter, K. (2011) ‘Mary Ann Baxter: philanthropist and founder of University College Dundee’ in Ten Taysiders: forgotten figures from Dundee, Angus and Perthshire, Abertay Historical Society (ed.); Cooke, A. J. (ed.) (1980) Baxter’s of Dundee, Dundee Univ. Dept Extra Mural Education; Dundee Advertiser, 20 Dec. 1884; Dundee Courier, 20 Dec. 1884 (obit.); ODNB (2004); DWT; Southgate, D. (1982) University Education in Dundee. Personal information.

born Dundee 4 May 1801, died Dundee 19 Dec. 1884. Philanthropist, founder of University College, Dundee (1884). Daughter of Elizabeth Gorrill (or Gorell), and William Baxter, textile merchant and manufacturer. Mary Ann Baxter, one of eight children, was born into a wealthy family. When she was 54, her brother David became chairman of Baxter’s, subsequently the world’s largest textile manufacturing firm with a workforce of 4,000. She and David were without dependants; they had ‘the means and opportunity to do good’ (Dundee Advertiser, 1884) and they gave generously. She supported missions in Central Africa, India, China and New Guinea, buying a steamer (called Ellengowan, after the family home) to take missionaries to New Guinea, where the Baxter River was named after her. She endowed an independent chapel in Letham, Fife, and a secular school with teacher’s salary. She led subscription lists for the Dundee YMCA, the Sailors’ Home and Dundee Royal Infirmary children’s ward. When family members died, she kept up their subscriptions. With David and her sister Eleanor she funded the creation of the 35-acre Baxter Park for the use of mill-workers. Always interested in education, she endowed scholarships at the University of Edinburgh. When the idea of a college in Dundee was promoted by John Boyd Baxter, Mary Ann’s second cousin and lifelong friend, she donated £140,000 of the £150,000 needed to found University College; he was the negotiator but she called the tune. The Deed of Endowment specified that the college should be for ‘persons of both sexes and the study of science, literature and the fine arts’ – but not divinity. Further, no student, professor or other officer should have to declare their religion (at a time when non-conformists could not graduate at some universities). The college was to be open to the working classes. It should not be part of the University of St Andrews and it should have enough money to be successful. She supervised the constitution, and chose the site and college secretary. She was a devout Congregationalist and an intelligent and determined woman. Her obituaries describe her as quiet and unostentatious. ‘She first satisfied herself that she was doing right and then

BAXTER, Mary Ann,

BEDDOWS, Charlotte Rankin Maule, n. Stevenson, m1 Watson, m2 Beddows, born Edinburgh 22 Oct.

1887, died North Berwick 22 August 1976. Golfer and hockey player. Daughter of Catherine Maule, and James Stevenson, general merchant. Charlotte Stevenson had a remarkable career under three names. As a teenager, she played hockey for Scotland from 1905, captaining the team several times; she was president of the SWHA 1925–31. However, she is most remembered for her long and distinguished career in golf. Practically self-taught and playing regularly against men, she developed skills as a long hitter. Aged 17 and still in pigtails, she fought her way to the semi-final of the 1905 Scottish Women’s Championship. At 19, she was champion of Craigmillar Park Golf Club and runner-up in the Gibson Cup (Edinburgh Town Council) over the Braid Hills golf course. A member of several local clubs, she won the Scottish Championship in 1920–2 and 1929, and was runner-up in 1923 and again in 1950, aged 62. While Joyce Wethered and Cecil (Cecilia) Leitch were dominating English golf, she flew the flag for Scotland, playing in the Home Internationals 21 times between 1913 and 1951. Having married optician John Watson, she played in the first Curtis Cup side in 1932, aged 45, as Mrs J. B. Watson. She later married Edward Beddows, Brigadier, RAMC. A lifelong golf enthusiast, she organised maintenance of the Gullane course during the Second World War. jlg

• George, J. (2003) ‘Women and golf in Scotland’, PhD, Univ. of Edinburgh; Low, S. (2003) Gullane Ladies’ Golf Club; ‘Sports and pastimes’, The Ladies’ Field, 9 Oct. 1909; Wilson, E. (1961) A Gallery of Women Golfers.

n. Burn(es)s, born Mount Oliphant 27 July 1771, died Alloway 4 Dec. 1858. Schoolmistress, sister of Robert Burns. Daughter of Agnes Broun, and William Burness, farmer.

BEGG, Isabella (Isobel),

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Isabella was the youngest child of the Burness family of four sons and three daughters, and the longest lived. She was the closest to her father and, after his death, Robert Burns, 12 years her senior, became a second father to her. As a child she had a sweet voice and would often sing her brother’s songs over to him in order that he could hear how they sounded. On 9 December 1793 she was married at the family home at Mossgiel farm to John Begg, a quarrier in Mossgiel. He died in 1813 after being thrown from his horse, leaving her with six sons and three daughters to raise. To earn her living she opened a school at Ormiston and later at Tranent. In 1842, admirers of Robert Burns, including Lord Houghton, Thomas Carlyle and Robert Chambers, set up a fund to keep Isabella Begg in her old age and, on the authority of Queen Victoria, she was provided with a pension. In 1843, with her two unmarried daughters, Agnes and Isabella, she moved from Tranent to Bridge House in Alloway, where she remained until her death. Isabella Begg had a remarkable memory and during her lifetime many people came to see her to learn about her brother, whom she outlived by more than 60 years. Her recollections contributed to and influenced many of the later biographies written about Robert Burns, in particular the account by Robert Chambers. After her death, her two daughters took on that responsibility. Visitors came to Bridge House from all walks of life, including several presidents of the USA. mb

ished and the case did not come to trial. Instead, Bell was indentured for life and transported to Virginia by a Glasgow merchant. This not only preserved her life, since she might have hanged, but also allowed the High Court to preserve Johnstone’s interest in his property, much as John Wedderburn’s possession of the African slave Joseph Knight would later be defended in Perth. DS • NRS: JC11/28; JC26/193, Items 1–5; JC41/12. Rothschild, E. (2011) The Inner Life of Empires: an eighteenthcentury history.

see PEARCE, Isabella Bream (Lily Bell) (1859–1929)

BELL, Lily

BERNSTEIN, Marion, born

London 16 Sept. 1846, died Glasgow 2 Feb. 1906. Writer and music teacher. Daughter of Lydia Pulsford, and Theodore Bernstein, small businessman and language teacher. Marion Bernstein and her siblings were born in England. By 1874 she was living in Glasgow with her brother and widowed mother, teaching piano and singing. She is now remembered for her writing. Verses commenting on current affairs were published from the mid-1870s in the Glasgow Weekly Mail. In the preface to her poetry collection, Mirren’s Musings (1876), Marion Bernstein refers to a ‘long period of physical affliction’. Some of this writing is melancholic, in contrast to the selfassured and humorous verse popular in the Mail: ‘There were female chiefs in the Cabinet/Much better than male I am sure/And the Commons were three parts feminine/While the Lords were seen no more!’ (Alexander 2000, p. 81). Despite her obviously Jewish surname, Bernstein was baptised into the Church of England as an infant, and although her denominational affiliation shifted over the course of her life, she was a devoted and practising Christian throughout. Indeed, in addition to her political poetry, much of her verse is devotional in nature. She never married; in 1901 she was living with her widowed sister Lydia in the city centre (and persuaded the census enumerator to describe her as a ‘professor of theory and harmony’). She died in poverty, existing on two small pensions from Scottish charities. Marion Bernstein had forthright opinions on women’s rights and was unafraid of defending them in print. Her views provided a legacy for current political activists in Scotland (ibid., pp. 81–8). LF

• Lindsay, M. (1995) The Burns Encyclopedia; Mackay, J. (1992) Burns; Ross, J. D. (1894) Burnsiana, vol. 3. BELL, born Bengal, India, c. 1750, last recorded, Williamsburg, Virginia, 1772. Slave/servant, indicted for infanticide. Bell, ‘alias Belinda, a black Girl or woman from Bengall in the East Indies, the Slave or servant to John Johnston [sic] of Hangingshaw, Esq.’ (JC26/193/3; cited in Rothschild, p. 89), probably began her life in Bengal as a lower-caste child before entering service to John Johnstone, a wealthy East India Company nabob. Bell travelled to London around 1767, when Johnstone returned. She reported living there for four years with her master and his wife before moving with them to Balgonie House, Fife. Her status and age are unclear: she was referred to as girl, woman, servant, slave, and property. When she was indicted for infanticide in Perth in 1771, after giving birth to a child later found strangled in the Water of Leven, the High Court accepted her petition to be ban-

• Mitchell Library, Glasgow: copies of Mirren’s Musings; Census, Glasgow; GPO directories.

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ranks of Thurso society, including the Countess of Ross and the daughter-in-law of Sir John Sinclair, who inspired the Statistical Account of Scotland (1791–9). Both casebooks are valuable sources in nursing history. bem

Bernstein, M. (1990) Verses in Leonard, T. (1990) Radical Renfrew. Alexander, W. (2000) ‘Women and the Scottish Parliament’, in A. Coote (ed.) New Gender Agenda; Cohen, E. H., Fertig, A. and Fleming, L. (eds) (2013) A Song of Glasgow Town: the collected poems of Marion Bernstein [incl. biographical introduction].

• NRS: GD1/812/1: M. Bethune, Casebook, 1853–87; Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh: Manuscripts, Cowper, Christian 1, Casebook. Mortimer, B. (2002) ‘The nurse in Edinburgh c. 1760–1860: the impact of commerce and professionalisation’, PhD, Univ. of Edinburgh; ODNB (2004).

BETHOC (Beatrice), Daughter of Somerled, died c. 1207. Prioress of Iona. Daughter of Somerled, Lord of the Isles. Bethoc was sister to Reginald, founder of the Augustinian convent on Iona. Her full title was ‘Bethag, daughter of Somhairle, son of GilleBrigde, Prioress of Icollumkill’. She was the nunnery’s first prioress, c. 1200 to 1207. The inscription on her tomb, still visible in the 17th century, read ‘Behag niin Schorle vic Ilvird Priorissa’ (Steer and Bannerman 1977, p. 90). The Iona Psalter in the NLS may have been owned by Bethoc, since it is claimed to have been illuminated in Oxford in the 13th century and commissioned by an Augustinian canoness with a special interest in Iona saints. kp

BIGGAR, Helen Manson, m. Montlake, born Partick 25 May 1909, died London 28 March 1953. Sculptor, film-maker, theatre designer. Daughter of Florence Hadden Manson, and Hugh Biggar, architect or builder. Helen Biggar was a daughter of the Glasgow Left. Her father was an early member of the ILP and her uncle was John Biggar, Glasgow councillor and Lord Provost. She herself became a member of the CPGB. Serious accidents in childhood left her physically short, with a severe and, at times, debilitating, curvature of the spine. She trained at Glasgow School of Art and on graduation took a studio in Glasgow where she worked as a sculptor. She is best remembered as the co-director, along with Norman McLaren, of the experimental film Camera Makes Whoopee (1935) and the classic agit-prop film Hell Unlimited (1936). She also directed a drama-documentary Glasgow’s May Day: Challenge to Fascism (1938), using a cast drawn from the Glasgow Workers’ Theatre Group (GWTG), one of the most adventurous of the leftwing amateur theatre groups active in Scotland in the 1930s. After that collaboration she became an active member of GWTG, designing the group’s celebrated production of Jack Lindsay’s declamatory poem On Guard for Spain (from around 1938). She also designed and co-produced The Masque of Spain, a huge pageant involving some 500 performers at Scotstoun Showground on 26 August 1939 in support of the Spanish Aid Committee. GWTG was one of five groups that came together in 1941 to form Glasgow Unity Theatre, where Helen Biggar continued to work and emerged as an influential designer, with productions including a pageant to mark the centenary of the co-operative movement (1944) and The Lower Depths (1945). She was a member and then chair of Glasgow Kino, involved particularly with the film society’s bid to take their films out to a wider audience.

• NLS: Iona Psalter, MS 10,000. McDonald, R. A. (1999) ‘The foundation and patronage of nunneries by native elites in twelfth and early thirteenth century Scotland’, in E. Ewan and M. Meikle (eds) Women in Scotland, c. 1100–c. 1750, (Bibl.); Steer, K. A. and Bannerman, J. W. M. (eds) (1977) Late Medieval Monumental Sculpture in the West Highlands.

n. Peebles, born Largo, Fife, 2 Oct. 1820, died Largo 10 April 1887. Midwife. Daughter of Margaret Walker, linen worker, and Andrew Peebles, weaver. In 1844, Margaret Peebles married coal-miner William Bethune. Widowed in 1852 and with two young children and her aged mother to support, she moved from Largo to Edinburgh to seek midwifery training, returning to her family early in 1853. For the rest of her life she was midwife to her community, logging her work in a casebook. Her record of 1,296 labours, all within the parish of Largo, shows that by 1859 she attended the majority of the parish births. Her clients represented most social classes in the village and the local doctor responded to her calls for assistance. An earlier example of a casebook was compiled by Christian Cowper of Thurso (before 1766–1843). Mrs Cowper recorded 3,948 deliveries between 1786 and 1843, the first three in Edinburgh, where she may have undertaken training. Her clients represented all

BETHUNE, Margaret,

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In 1946, Helen Biggar moved to London and was joined in her Clapham studio by colleagues from Glasgow, artists Robert Frame and her future husband Eli Montlake; they married in October 1948. She continued to design for Glasgow Unity and London Unity, and in 1950 joined Ballet Rambert as wardrobe mistress, becoming costume designer for the company in early 1953. She produced sculpture throughout her life, including ‘The kneeling girl’ (1945) and ‘Mother and child’ (1947), and is remembered for her pioneering blend of politics and art. as

rapidly converted *Helen Fraser to WSPU policy. Both women campaigned in the Aberdeen South by-election (February 1907) when the WSPU opposed all Liberal candidates, whatever their views on women’s suffrage. When the WSPU Scottish Council was established (June 1907), Teresa Billington-Greig was secretary, *Isabella Pearce treasurer, and Helen Fraser organiser for Scotland. Teresa Billington-Greig favoured a democratic organisation, but Emmeline and Christabel Pankhurst appeared to resent her influence within Scotland. As a result, with Charlotte Despard, she left the WSPU and founded the WFL, for which she campaigned actively throughout Scotland with Isabella Pearce, *Maggie Moffat, *Anna Munro and *Eunice Murray. She campaigned not only for women’s suffrage but for full sexual equality, challenging the double standard of morality and the inequitable situation of women in marriage and employment. Her writings analysed male oppression of women, and the misogyny and ‘sex prejudice’ they faced (McPhee and FitzGerald 1987, p. 115). She left the WFL in December 1910, for not living up to its democratic and non-violent aspirations, putting her case in The Militant Suffrage Movement (1911) and in freelance speaking and writing. After briefly separating from her husband in 1913–14, she returned to Glasgow and during the war sometimes substituted for her husband at his billiard works. In 1923, the BillingtonGreigs moved to London. She maintained contact with the WFL, occasionally resuming activism, as in 1928 and 1937, and in her final years encouraged the Six Point Group, established in 1921 to continue the campaign for equal rights. Despite her rejection of militant suffragism, Teresa Billington-Greig’s impact on the Scottish women’s suffrage movement was considerable, and the WFL maintained a strong presence in Scotland long after 1918. jr

• Norman McLaren Archive, University of Stirling: GAA31/C/3, 64, letters from McLaren to Helen Biggar 1936–1939. ODNB (2004); Shepherd A. (1978) ‘Helen Biggar and Norman McLaren’, New Edinburgh Review 40, pp. 25–6, (1997) ‘Helen Manson Biggar (1909–53)’, Scot. Lab. Hist. Rev., 10, pp. 4–6, (1998) ‘The Biggar Boys’, Scot. Lab. Hist. Rev., 11, pp. 12–3, (2014) Helen Unlimited: A Little Biggar. ‘Helen Biggar’, Mapping the Practice and Profession of Sculpture in Britain and Ireland 1851–1951, University of Glasgow History of Art and HATII, online database 2011, www.sculpture.gla.ac.uk/view/person. php?id=msib6_1222162579, accessed 05 Jun 2017. MSW.

born Preston 15 Oct. 1876, died London 21 Oct. 1964. Suffragist. Daughter of Helen Wilson, and William Billington, shipping clerk. Educated in Blackburn, Teresa Billington trained as a pupil teacher in Manchester and became an elementary school teacher there in 1903. Brought up a Roman Catholic, she rejected first Catholicism and then the teaching of Christianity in schools. Emmeline Pankhurst helped her transfer to a Jewish school, to prevent dismissal. Recruited by Emmeline Pankhurst for the WSPU, she began to speak for the women’s suffrage cause, and in April 1904 helped organise the Manchester teachers’ equal pay league. Pankhurst persuaded Keir Hardie to hire her as an ILP organiser, and for two years she combined this with organising the WSPU’s London-based activities, being the first suffragette to go to Holloway Prison. In autumn 1906, she was asked to organise WSPU branches in Scotland. On 8 February 1907, in Glasgow, she married Glasgow businessman and socialist Frederick Lewis Greig (1875–1961). Their pre-nuptial agreement included both adopting the name Billington-Greig. They had one daughter, Fiona (b. 1915). Teresa Billington-Greig had a considerable impact on the GWSAWS; her powerful speaking

BILLINGTON-GREIG, Teresa Mary,

• Women’s Library, London: Billington-Greig MSS. AGC; DLabB, vol. 12 (Bibl.); Eustance, C. (1993) ‘“Daring to be free”: the evolution of women’s political identities in the Women’s Freedom League, 1906–1930’, DPhil, Univ. of York; Harrison, B. (1987) Prudent Revolutionaries: portraits of British feminists between the wars; Holton, S. S. (1986) Feminism and Democracy: women’s suffrage and reform politics in Britain, 1900–1918; McPhee, C. and Fitzgerald, A. (1987) (eds) The Non-violent Militant: selected writings of Teresa BillingtonGreig; ODNB (2004); WSM. BIRD, Isabella Lucy, m. Bishop, born Boroughbridge, Yorkshire, 15 Oct. 1831, died Edinburgh 7 Oct. 1904. Travel writer. Daughter of Dorothy Lawson, and Rev. Edward Bird.

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Brought up in English vicarages, Isabella Bird was given a broad education by her parents. From childhood she suffered from a spinal complaint and, in 1854, doctors prescribed a sea-voyage to North America which resulted in her first travelogue. After her father died, with her mother and sister Henrietta she settled in Edinburgh in 1859, which was mostly her home base thereafter. She began her emigration scheme for Highland crofters, established a shelter for itinerant cabmen, and continued writing on religious and literary topics and social conditions. In 1871, Isabella Bird went on a six-month cruise to North America and Europe which temporarily relieved ill-health and depression, her apparent reaction to staying at home. After a miserable visit to the Antipodes in 1872, she was exhilarated by a hurricane in the South Pacific and daring exploits in Hawaii. Her health improved dramatically. The adventures continued in the Rockies where she went climbing with ‘Rocky Mountain Jim’, rode alone over 600 miles in wintry weather through virgin territory, and lived for months in an isolated log cabin. Visiting Japan in 1878, she suffered great privation so that she could reach the Ainu tribe in the wildernesses of Hokkaido. (A permanent exhibition in Nanyo city still commemorates this trip.) In Malaya in 1879, she enjoyed a dinner party with two apes who ‘required no conversational efforts’ (Bird 1883, p. 307). Ostensibly travelling for her health, she discovered a way of escaping the confines of conventional society in the wilder parts of the world. Daringly riding astride, wearing a bloomer suit, she preferred a ‘journey alone on horseback with only saddle bags and a native as guide’ (Bird 2002, p. 101). At last she had found her niche as a travel writer of distinction, justifying her enjoyment of challenging travel as ‘a woman’s right to do what she can do well’ (Checkland 1996). Triumphs and hardships are vividly conveyed and rapturous descriptions of mountains and jungles are accompanied by meticulous practical details of her expeditions. Her popular accounts of the early adventures were based on letters to Henrietta, and are livelier in style than later travelogues after her sister’s death in 1880, which much distressed her. In 1881, she married Dr John Bishop, ten years her junior; he died five years later. In 1887, she trained as a medical auxiliary to help found memorial hospitals to her sister and husband in India, and lectured throughout the UK on the need for medical missions. In 1889, she resumed

her travels, spending two years in Tibet and the Middle East. On her return she was consulted by Gladstone about the Christians in Armenia. From 1894, she spent more than three years touring the Far East, taking many photographs. Her last adventure was in Morocco at the age of 70. She died with her trunks packed ready for another journey, finding ‘society . . . fatiguing and clattering. My soul hankers for solitude and freedom’ (Bird 2002, p. 205). The first female Fellow of the RGS (1892) and of the SRGS (1892), Isabella Bishop left her books to the University of Edinburgh and donated several Ainu objects to the RSM. Her tombstone is in the Dean cemetery. jrr • NLS: MSS 2621–64: Isabella Bird Papers: 1852–1901 (John Stuart Blackie Collection); Archives of John Murray (Publishers); RGS: Photographic negatives of China. Bird, I. L. (1856) The Englishwoman in America, (1883) The Golden Chersonese and the Way Thither, (1984) (ed. Havely, C. P.) This Grand Beyond, (1997) (ed. Checkland, O.) Collected Travel Writings of Isabella Bird, 12 vols, (2002) (ed. Chubbuck, K.) Letters to Henrietta. Barr, P. (1970, re-ed. 1984) A Curious Life for a Lady; Checkland, O. (1996) Isabella Bird and ‘A Woman’s Right to Do What She Can Do Well’ (Bibl.); ODNB (2004); Stoddart, A. (1906) The Life of Isabella Bird (Mrs Bishop).

n. Wedderburn, born Edinburgh 1 May 1823, died Roshven 9 August 1909. Painter, illustrator, ornithologist. Daughter of Isabella Clerk of Penicuik, and James Wedderburn, Solicitor-General for Scotland. Born six months after her father’s death, Jemima Wedderburn was the seventh child in this well-connected family (her cousin was the physicist James Clerk Maxwell). A delicate child, she was encouraged to draw and treasured a copy of Bewick’s British Birds given to her at the age of four. She sketched her pets and on a visit to London in her teens met Sir Edwin Landseer (1802–73), who told her he could teach her nothing about painting animals. Her narrative paintings, often including portrayals of herself, form a visual record of her times, later complemented by her memoirs which she began in 1899. She experimented with emerging visual media, including photography, an interest shared with her husband, Hugh Blackburn, Professor of Mathematics at the University of Glasgow (1823–1909). They married on 12 June 1849 and had four children between 1850 and 1865, during which time they moved to Roshven on Loch Ailort. Jemima Blackburn travelled in Europe and North Africa, and contributed to an exhibition BLACKBURN, Jemima,

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of British paintings (New York, Philadelphia and Boston, winter 1857–8). Widely exhibited in Britain, she may have shown at the first exhibition of the Society of Female Artists (London 1857: archives lost during the Second World War). Beatrix Potter met her in 1891 and recalls in her own journal (Potter 1989, p. 215) her delight at receiving a copy of Birds Drawn from Nature (1862; 1868) when she was ten. Jemima Blackburn’s illustrated account of the newly fledged but blind cuckoo despatching a more mature pipit from its nest verified Edward Jenner’s earlier claims and prompted Charles Darwin to revise a paragraph in the 6th edition of the Origin of Species (1872). She was one of the most popular book illustrators of her day. el

Garden. The first volume was so well received that she was permitted to present it in person to the Royal College of Physicians. On 7 September 1742, her son Alexander was baptised in Saint Paul’s, Covent Garden. Her husband became an agricultural adviser to the Duke of Chandos but, in 1743, went to Sweden to serve the King as an agricultural and husbandry improver. He became caught up in the political intrigues of his new country and, in 1747, was executed for conspiring to overthrow the Swedish King and government. Elizabeth Blackwell remained in London with her son until at least July 1747. There is no further record of her, although one historian claims she died in 1758 and was buried in Chelsea Old Church. Her work was acclaimed long after her death and was translated into Latin in 1773 as the Herbarium Blackwellianum by the Count Palatine, Dr Christopher Jakob Trew and Christian Ludwig. It was unusual for a woman of her time to produce such a book, as it was intended for and used by a professional medical audience. nk

• Blackburn, J., Work as above, and [1899] (1988) Jemima: the paintings and memoirs of a Victorian lady, R. Fairley, ed. (1993) Blackburn’s Birds: the bird paintings of Jemima Blackburn, R. Fairley, ed. Harris, P. and Halsby, J. (eds) (1990) The Dictionary of Scottish Painters 1600–1960; ODNB (2004); Potter, B. (1989) The Journal of Beatrix Potter 1881–1897.

n. Blachrie, baptised Aberdeen 22 June 1707, died London possibly 1758. Botanical illustrator and author. Daughter of Isobel Fordyce, and William Blachrie, merchant. Elizabeth Blachrie grew up in Aberdeen but ran away to London and married her second cousin, Alexander Blackwell (1709–47), in about 1728. The elopement may have been related to the fact that Alexander Blackwell’s father was the Principal of Marischal College. Her father is thought to have been a stocking merchant, but she was connected to some prominent Aberdeen families. Her cousin, Barbara Black (fl. 1749–93), who married Alexander’s brother, Thomas Blackwell, c. 1749, left an endowment to Marischal College to establish its first chair of chemistry in 1793. Alexander Blackwell was imprisoned for debt in 1734, after unsuccessfully trying to practise as a physician and a printer. Elizabeth Blackwell approached a leading physician, Richard Mead, and the Royal College of Physicians for a grant to produce and publish a two-volume book, A Curious Herbal, Containing 500 Cuts of the Most Useful Plants Which Are Now Used in the Practice of Physick. She used the advance to pay for her husband’s release. The herbal contained 500 botanical copperplate illustrations. Each plant’s caption gave the common name (and Latin and Greek where applicable) and associated medical uses. Her drawings were based on plants in the Chelsea Physic

• Aberdeen City Archives: St Nicholas Parish Registers, Births and Christenings 1707–71; St Paul’s, Covent Garden, Parish Registers, Births and Christenings 1653–1837. Blackwell, E. (1737–9) A Curious Herbal. Bruce, J. (1841) Lives of Eminent Men of Aberdeen; Henrey, B. (1975) British Botanical and Horticultural Literature Before 1800, vol. 2; ODNB (2004) (Bibl.).

BLACKWELL, Elizabeth,

BLACKWOOD, Margaret, m. McGrath, MBE, born Dundee 1 Oct. 1924, died Edinburgh 28 Jan. 1994. Founder of Disability Income Group Scotland. Daughter of Beatrice Marie Orr, and George Blackwood, actuary. Margaret Blackwood was diagnosed with muscular dystrophy when she was a pupil at St Margaret’s School, Edinburgh. After leaving school in 1943, she failed to complete a watchmaking apprenticeship and later wrote that she spent the next 20 years in despair. ‘All my dreams were taken from me . . . I had no aim, no goal. I sank into despair’ (Open Door, 1991). In 1965 she learned that Megan du Boisson, suffering from multiple sclerosis, had set up the Disability Income Group (DIG) in England, and wrote to her. In 1966, she established DIG Scotland to campaign for a national disability income. In the same year she lobbied Scottish MPs, organised a march along Princes Street and held a rally in Trafalgar Square. According to the Edinburgh Weekly (1968), she had turned

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from ‘vegetating invalid to a warrior in a wheelchair’. The 1970 Chronically Sick and Disabled Persons Act introduced a series of financial benefits for disabled people (including mobility allowance and attendance allowance). Margaret Blackwood was nominated Disabled Scot of 1971 and awarded the MBE in 1972. With help from her mother, Bee, she extended her campaign to housing for disabled people. In 1976, the Margaret Blackwood Housing Association (MBHA) opened in Dundee. Through DIG, Margaret met and worked with Charles McGrath who was almost completely immobilised by ankylosing spondylitis. They were married in 1978 in the Intensive Care Unit at Perth Royal Infirmary. Charles died two weeks later. fy

enterprise. Her objective was income generation for poor and isolated rural women rather than leisure activities. She painted and embroidered (including a panel depicting the history of the WRI) and made many of her own designs in needlework, furnishings and pottery. She was also involved in setting up the Lothian Hame Arts Guild of ­craftswomen. In 1932 Catherine and Thomas retired to North Berwick, where a new Mak’Merry Studio was e­ stablished. Among her colleagues was Agnes Henderson Brown (Nannie) (fl. 1912, died 1944), a member of the WFL and one of six women who walked from Edinburgh to London on the 1912 suffrage march. She was Honorary Secretary of the Edinburgh branch of the Northern Men’s Federation for Women’s Suffrage (1913), in which her sister Jessie Wishart Brown (fl. 1912, d. 1937) was also active. Nannie was the SWRI’s organiser, 1917–22, and a member of the EWCA. The sisters were among the first women to be seen on bicycles in Scotland and their home in Castle Terrace became a centre of cultural activity. lrm

• Blackwood, M. (1991) Autobiographical article in Open Door, Dec. (former newsletter of MBHA), and on website: www.mbha.org.uk Darling, S. (1994) Funeral tribute, ‘Margaret Blackwood McGrath, an appreciation’; Edinburgh Weekly, May 1968; Leighton, P. (2000) ‘Margaret Blackwood McGrath’, Profile 2000.

• BL: Arncliffe-Sennett Collection, vol. 26 (letter); NRS: HH16/44 (letter) and HH16/40 (letter); Museum of London: Women’s Suffrage Fellowship collection, (letter). Blair, C. (n.d.) Suffragettes and Sacrilege, WSPU pamphlet, (1917) An Appeal to Country Women, SWRI leaflet, (1925) ‘The Scottish Movement’, in J. W. R. Scott, The Story of the Women’s Institute Movement, pp. 214–33; (1940) Rural Journey: a history of the SWRI from cradle to majority. Leneman, L. (1991) ‘Northern men and votes for women’, History Today, Dec., pp. 35–41; ODNB (2004) (see Brown, Agnes); Sharon, M. (1987) ‘Catherine Blair: living her “splendid best”’, Scottish Home and Country, Dec. pp. 742–57; SS; The Scotsman, 4 Aug. 1937 (obit. Jessie Brown), 19 Nov. 1946 (obit. Catherine Blair).

n. Shields, born Bathgate 8 Jan. 1872, died North Berwick 18 Nov. 1946. Suffragette, artist and founder of the SWRI. Daughter of Susan Jemima Bertram, and James Shields, farmer. The third of six children, Catherine Shields was educated at Bathgate Academy. She married Thomas Blair in 1894 and they set up home at Hoprig Mains Farm, East Lothian, near Macmerry. They had four children and a happy marriage. A lifelong campaigner for fairness and democracy, Catherine Blair was an active member of the WSPU, chairing local meetings and writing countless letters to the press, although she did not participate in militancy because of her young family. Thomas supported her and Hoprig Mains Farm provided a secret refuge for Scottish suffragette prisoners released under the ‘Cat and Mouse’ Act. Concerned about the social and cultural isolation and welfare needs of women in rural areas, and against considerable opposition, she founded the first SWRI at Longniddry in 1917. As a member of the Council of Agriculture (1916), she persuaded the Scottish Department to fund SWRIs throughout Scotland. She campaigned for the development of rural industries and for economic and social initiatives that would make use of women’s potential. In 1919 she founded the Mak’Merry pottery studio as a practical example of a co-operative rural

BLAIR, Catherine Hogg,

‘BLAK LADY’, THE, fl. 1507–8. Attendant at the court of James IV. The ‘Blak Lady’ featured prominently in two of the most spectacular events of James IV’s reign: the international tournaments, ‘The Jousting of the Wild Knight for the Black Lady’, held in Edinburgh in June 1507, then reprised in May 1508. Richly dressed, she was born in a triumphal chair to the tournament ground with her own costumed attendants. The precise nature of her role is open to conjecture, but she presided over the ceremonies of entry and kept a White Shield for combatants to touch before jousting. Tournaments often employed allegorical plots and took the form of theatrical ‘battles’ for an unattainable queen of

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beauty. At the banquet on the final day, the ‘Blak Lady’ was spirited away in a cloud by means of an ingenious mechanical device. The same woman is very probably the subject of William Dunbar’s poem ‘Of Ane Black Moir (Moor)’, commonly dated 1507–8. He refers to her having arrived on recent ships. A number of black people were living at James IV’s court, serving chiefly as musicians and entertainers, including ‘Elene Moir’ (Moor), ‘blak Margaret’, and certain ‘Moris lassis’ (Moorish lassies), but the status and identity of the ‘Blak Lady‘ is ­uncertain. BF

Deux Mondes, the Revue de Paris and on European politics in the Daily News. Among her friends were Lord Brougham, Patrick and *Anna Geddes and, in Paris, Paul Desjardins. Her now-forgotten novels included All for Greed (1868) and Love the Avenger (1869); she also wrote literary studies of Racine (1845) and Molière (1846). das • Blaze de Bury, R., Works as above. Dictionnaire de Biographie Française ; The Times, 29 Jan. 1894 (obit.). BLETCHLEY PARK WOMEN RECRUITS. During the Second World War, Bletchley Park in Buckinghamshire became the HQ of the British Government Code and Cypher School, devoted to breaking enemy codes such as Enigma. Its very existence remained unknown to the general public until W. H. Winterbotham’s book (1974) led to further publications and revelations of the identities of those who worked there, once the information was declassified. By the end of the war, three-quarters of Bletchley’s c.7,000-strong personnel were women – civilians or servicewomen. In what Annie Burman (2013, p. 40) describes as ‘horizontal segregation’, the great majority were employed on clerical tasks or machine-minding; relatively few as codebreakers or translators. Nevertheless, ‘typing, filling in Foss [squared paper] sheets, teleprinting, blisting [recording Enigma messages on a register, or b-list], decrypting intercepts, and operating bombes and Colossi [machines used for codebreaking, forerunners of computers]’ were all tasks crucial to the overall operation (ibid., p. 58). Several Scottish women recruits have been identified, and this entry stands for many others, unrecorded or still alive. Some recruits came from St Leonards School, Fife, for instance (ibid., p. 22). Others were graduates of Scottish universities, but there was a wide social range. Agnes Allan, n. Shearer MBE (Kilsyth 1921–Clydebank 2003) was a Glasgow graduate. An FO civilian recruit at the end of the war, she compiled information on German scientists, later becoming a pioneering special-needs teacher and campaigner. Moira Beaty, n. Munro (Prestwick 1922–Balfron 2015) became a cryptographer, the only woman working on Western Europe, in Hut 8, alongside Alan Turing. She later became a widely exhibited artist and teacher. Margaret Beedie, n. Christy Maggie McKinnon (Harris 1921– Aberdeen 2014), an Aberdeen graduate, worked in Hut 7 as an FO civilian on Hollerith [tabulating] machines, later teaching in Aberdeen. Irene Brown,

• Bawcutt, P. (1992) Dunbar the Makar; Dunbar, W. (1998) The Poems, 2 vols, P. Bawcutt (ed.); Cowan, M. (2014) ‘African Currents in the Renaissance Scottish Court’, History Today (Nov/Dec); Fradenburg, L. O. (1991) City, Marriage, Tournament: arts of rule in late medieval Scotland. BLAZE de BURY, Marie Pauline Rose, Baroness,

n. Stuart [Arthur Dudley], born Oban c. 1813, interred Paris 28 Jan. 1894. Journalist, critic, novelist, ­political networker, salon hostess. Daughter of William Stuart, army officer, and his wife, n. Campbell. Rose Stuart’s early life and education remain uncharted. As a single woman she contributed articles pseudonymously or unsigned to Blackwood’s Magazine and The Law Review. Travelling on the continent, she met and married in 1844 AngeHenri Blaze de Bury (1813–88), French attaché in Weimar. A republican, he refused Second Empire postings and made a distinguished career as historian and critic, in which his wife, who exerted a strong influence over him, occasionally collaborated, as in Hommes du Jour (1859). One of their two daughters, Yetta Blaze de Bury (d. 1902/3), also wrote literary criticism. Intelligent, dynamic and charming, Rose Blaze de Bury was fluent in Spanish, French and German, and attracted intellectuals and politicians to her international salons. She was an inveterate traveller with or without her husband, as illustrated by Voyage en Autriche, Hongrie, Allemagne 1848–49 (1851). Her travel books and studies demonstrated depth and accuracy of knowledge. In 1858–9 she drafted an ambitious plan for Austria’s economic development involving a trade pact with Britain: L’Autriche et ses réformes (1861). Concurrently, she established an Anglo-Austrian bank of Catholic configuration. From Paris she corresponded with Bismarck and the ambassadors of most European countries and the USA. She wrote for the Revue des 45

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n. Young, m1 Cairns, m2 Brown (Edinburgh 1919– Edinburgh 2017), an English literature graduate, wrote a book about her time at Bletchley (Young 1990); Iona Crabbie, n. Ruthven Stuart (London 1922–Edinburgh 2007), a linguist, learnt Japanese at Bletchley and worked on deciphering in the Naval Section. She was later a pioneer lay panel member of Scotland’s Children’s Hearings system (see *Beti Jones). Isabella Dunnett, n. Forbes-Mackay, m1 Mills, m2 Dunnett (Campbelltown 1921–Edinburgh 2008) was fluent in German and translated signals in Hut 6. She later worked with disabled children. Alison Fairlie (Lerwick 1917–Cambridge 1993) returned from occupied France as a student and was appointed as an FO civilian at Bletchley Park, ‘one of the superior beings’ who translated (Hinsley and Stripp, p. 69). She later became professor of French at Cambridge University. Ethel Houston (Edinburgh 1924–Edinburgh 2017) broke off her studies to work as an FO civilian, intercepting radio messages. She was later a pioneering lawyer. Cecile McLachlan, n. Johnston (Edinburgh 1925–Edinburgh 2009) had been sketched as a child by Ronald Searle, as ‘the original St Trinian’s schoolgirl’ (Scotsman, 12 Oct. 2009). She entered Bletchley as one of the many Wrens (WRNS), but always refused to say exactly what she did there. A talented artist, she later chaired the Scottish Society of Women Artists. Ann Pamela Scott Moncrieff, n. Murray (1925–2013) was a bombe [early computer] operator. Dorothy Smith, n. McLean (Dundee 1921–Dundee 2015) served with Royal Signals as an ATS intercept operator, and later worked as a modest clerk, keeping her secret, as indeed did all those who worked at Bletchley, men or women. In 2009, survivors received a long overdue medal from the Queen. SR

BOHEMIA, Elizabeth, Queen of see STEWART, Elizabeth, Queen of Bohemia, Electress Palatine

(1596–1662) BOLLAN, Angela, born Blackburn 5 March 1977, died Stirling 26 April 1996. Subject of government inquiry. Daughter of Ann Bollan, and Jim Bollan, Scottish Socialist Party councillor. Angela Bollan’s family described her as a bubbly person who made friends easily. She was active in art and drama, did voluntary work helping elderly neighbours and, her parents said, ‘transcended the gap’ between the generations. Her mother was herself on incapacity benefit. Angela’s daughter Stephanie was born 2 September 1994. In the last years of her life, Angela was struggling with heroin addiction and was arrested on charges of shoplifting. In April 1996, she was remanded in custody at HMP Cornton Vale for shoplifting toiletries worth £19. Eleven days later, she hanged herself from the bars of her cell. Angela Bollan’s case came to represent the injustice of inappropriate custody for women. Her death was the fourth in a series of eight suicides at Cornton Vale over a three-year period. Most of the women who died were, like Angela, young (under 30) and on remand. Their deaths gave rise to a government inquiry (Inspectorates of Prisons and Social Work Services 1998) which concluded that many female offenders in Scotland were being sent into custody not for the seriousness of their crimes, but for failure to comply with court orders or community penalties. A report addressing the issue (2002) was produced for the Scottish Executive, and a further report for the Scottish Government (Angiolini 2012) described Cornton Vale as ‘not fit for purpose’, recommending different solutions, now under consideration. NL

• Bletchley Park Trust website: www.bletchleypark.org.uk (see esp. Roll of Honour – for individual records, usually under maiden name); Burman, A. (2013) ‘Gendering decryption – decrypting gender: the gender discourse of labour at Bletchley Park 1939–1945’, MA thesis University of Cambridge, consulted online; Grey, C. (2012) Decoding Organization: Bletchley Park, codebreaking and organization studies; Hinsley, F. H. and Stripp, A. (eds) (2001) Codebreakers: the inside story of Bletchley Park; ODNB (2004, Fairlie); Winterbotham, F. W. (1974) The Ultra Secret; Young, I. (1990) Enigma Variations: a memoir of love and war; The Herald, 28 Jan. 2003 (obit. Allan); 9 Dec. 2017 (obit. Houston); The Scotsman, 30 May 2008 (obit. Crabbie), 5 Jan. 2009 (obit. Dunnett), 18 Oct. 2009 (obit. McLachlan), 6 Feb 2013 (obit. Scott Moncrieff ), 14 Aug. 2014 (obit. Beedie), 9 March 2015 (obit. Beaty), 20 June 2017 (obit. Brown).

• Angiolini, E. (2012) Commission on Women Offenders, final report; Inspectorates of Prisons and Social Work Services (1998) Women Offenders – A Safer Way?; Scottish Executive Ministerial Group on Women’s Offending (2002) A Better Way. Private information: Jim Bollan.

n. Dougall, born Dunning, Perthshire, 9 April 1838, died Melbourne, Australia, 5 June 1936. Scottish-Australian philanthropist. Daughter of Jane Fraser, and David Dougall, physician. In 1858, aged 19, Ann Dougall married a Scotsman, John Bon, and accompanied him to the south-eastern Australian colony of Victoria, BON, Ann Fraser,

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where the first colonists had acquired land without benefit of treaties with or compensation for the indigenous hunter-gatherer owners. John Bon was already well established in pastoralism, and the couple prospered on his extensive holding. Ann Bon gave birth to five children in swift ­succession but was widowed in 1868 at the age of 30. Unusually for a woman at the time, she then assumed the management of the property. A devout Presbyterian and humanitarian, she distinguished herself most conspicuously from her peers by her strenuous public interventions to support Aborigines’ resistance to increasing state regimes of control and surveillance. While Ann Bon’s adherence to goals of ‘improvement’ and ‘civilisation’ now appear paternalistic and ethnocentric, many members of indigenous communities nevertheless expressed gratitude for her assistance in thwarting if not defeating the diminution of Aboriginal entitlements and civil rights. Her commitment to this cause and other charitable activities was ­lifelong. pg

In Cromarty she attracted the respect of the young Miller, and her circumstances became easier when she was given charge of three young wards. Back in Edinburgh in later years she struggled with destitution before returning to Portsoy to attempt, unsuccessfully, another school in the last years of her life. She left a poignant will and is buried in Portsoy. The Letters, a somewhat uneven medley of moral narratives, attractively child-centred pedagogical ideas and elaborately fictionalised autobiography, offer a vivid sense of early-19thcentury small-town manners and culture in the north of Scotland, and are also a testimony to the exceptional resilience, wit and spirit of an educated but unsupported woman thrown for the whole of her adult life entirely upon her own resources. ERW, PBW • NLS: Millgate Union Catalogue of Walter Scott Correspondence. Bond, E. (1814) Letters of a Village Governess. Findlater, J. (1931) ‘The injudicious governess’, Cornhill Magazine (Nov. 1931); Miller, H. (1854) My Schools and Schoolmasters.

• ADB; Barwick, D. (1998) Rebellion at Coranderrk; Cruickshank, J. and Grimshaw, P. (2015) ‘Indigenous Land Loss, Justice and Race: Anne Bon and the contradictions of settler humanitarianism’, in Z. Laidlaw and A. Lester (eds) Indigenous Communities and Settler Colonialism; Nelson, E., Smith, S. and Grimshaw, P. (eds) (2002) Letters from Aboriginal Women of Victoria, 1867 to 1926.

BONE, Phyllis Mary, RSA,

born Hornby, Lancs., 15 Feb. 1894, died Kirkcudbright 12 July 1972. Sculptor. Daughter of Mary Campbell Smith, and Douglas J. Mayhew Bone, GP. Living with an aunt after her mother’s early death, Phyllis Bone attended St George’s School, Edinburgh, then ECA and the New College of Art (Diploma in Sculpture 1918) before studying in Paris with the animal sculptor Edouard Navellier. She finally settled in a studio in Belford Mews, Edinburgh. During the First World War, she served as motor driver in the Women’s Legion. Her career was launched when she was chosen by Sir Robert Lorimer to be responsible for all the animal sculpture in the Scottish National War Memorial, Edinburgh Castle (1923–8). Other work includes animals on the Zoological Building of the University of Edinburgh, the lion and unicorn reliefs on St Andrew’s House, and many public and private commissions, including small bronzes of animals, cast by George Mancini. The first woman elected ARSA, then RSA in 1944, in later life Phyllis Bone relocated to Kirkcudbright near fellow-artists Lena Alexander and *Anna Hotchkis. jh

BOND, Elizabeth, born c. 1767, died Portsoy, 9 May 1839. Schoolteacher and author. Elizabeth Bond’s origins remain obscure, although independent records exist for various aspects of the final 25 years or so of her life. A fuller picture of her earlier years emerges from her one publication, the semi-autobiographical Letters of a Village Governess (published by subscription in London in 1814 and dedicated to Scott). After a cultured and comfortably affluent youth in or near Kelso, she seems to have been left without family or means and had to support herself as best she could through teaching, initially near Edinburgh as a governess. Despite some good connections she constantly struggled to make a living. About 1800 she moved to the Highlands and for the next twenty years or so ran schools in Portsoy, Fortrose and Cromarty. The move to Fortrose was an attempt to improve her financial footing; according to Hugh Miller, the move from Fortrose to Cromarty (c. 1814) was a result of the inclusion in the Letters of thinly disguised anecdotes about her neighbours.

• NLS: Dep 199: Phyllis Bone papers and inventory of art works, photographs. MSW; Pearson, F. (ed.) (1991) Virtue and Vision; Savage, P. (1980) Lorimer and the Edinburgh Craft Designers; SB. Private information.

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born Penicuik 7 Oct. 1881, died Clapham, London, 20 August 1955. Pharmacist. Daughter of Margaret Davidson, and Peter Borrowman, shepherd. The oldest of four children, Agnes Borrowman left school at 16 and served apprenticeships in local chemist shops where, because of the prejudice then existing against women in this field, she always had to work in the back shop. She qualified in 1903 as chemist and druggist, but as a woman was obliged to go to England to find work. As well as managing a pharmacy shop, she studied and became a pharmaceutical chemist in 1909, later carrying out research at the School of Pharmacy. A paper she read to the NAWP was ‘one of the most fascinating papers ever read at such a meeting’ (Pharm. Jour. 1911). Research was poorly paid, so after the death of her father in 1913, she had to return to retail pharmacy to help support younger members of her family. Acquiring a historic pharmacy at Clapham, she made it a valuable training ground for future women pharmacists. Agnes Borrowman was a pioneer in everything to do with the employment of women in pharmacy, and an intrepid fighter where their interests were concerned. The first woman to serve on the Society’s Board of Examiners, she was a founder member of the NAWP and a Fellow of the Pharmaceutical Society. Further family commitments included several months nursing a sister in Canada. Latterly in failing health, she remained a fighter for all she believed in. aw

importance as mediators of German hymnody to 19th-century Britain. Of Jane’s 61 translations, the best known are ‘Be still my soul’ and ‘Jesus, still lead on’; Sarah’s 53 included ‘God calling yet’, and ‘O happy home’. Jane never married, living a life of quiet piety and good works in the family home. In 1861, Sarah married a Free Church minister, Eric J. Findlater (1813–66), and lived in Balquidder, then Prestonpans. Two of her daughters, *Mary and Jane Findlater, became successful novelists. ll

BORROWMAN, Agnes Thomson,

• Andrews, J. S. (1981) A Study of German Hymns in Current English Hymnals, (1982–3) ‘The Borthwick sisters as translators of German hymns’, Expository Times, 94, pp. 329–33; CDH; Mackenzie, E. (1964) The Findlater Sisters; *ODNB (2004); Routley, E. (1979) A Panorama of Christian Hymnody; The Scotsman, 9 Sept. 1897 (obit.). BOSWELL, Margaret (Peggie), n. Montgomerie, born Lainshaw, Ayrshire, March 1738, died Auchinleck 4 June 1789. Wife of James Boswell. Daughter of Veronica Boswell, and David Montgomerie of Lainshaw. Margaret Montgomerie, when aged 31, married her first cousin, James Boswell (1740–95), laird, advocate, author and heir to the Scottish judge, Lord Auchinleck. At 29, Boswell already had a European reputation for his Account of Corsica (1768), his private journals recording high and low life, and an illegitimate daughter. Neither a great beauty nor an heiress, Peggie offered a respectable and comfortable alternative to James’s whores and grandees. An eminently sensible woman, she presided in James’s Court, Edinburgh, and later at Auchinleck House. Five of their seven children reached adulthood: three daughters, the heir, Sir Alexander, poet and antiquarian, and James, scholar and editor of Shakespeare. James Boswell’s correspondence and his journals, which she predicted would leave him ‘embowelled to posterity’ (Life of Johnson, 1773), show his lasting affection for this clever and humorous woman, whose patience he tried through drink, liaisons and London excursions. The undomesticated Samuel Johnson was warily received on his Scottish tour of 1773 (he dropped candle-wax all over her carpet). She remarked ‘in a little warmth’ of her husband and Johnson, ‘I have seen many a bear led by a man, but I never before saw a man led by a bear’ (ibid.). Comments on Johnson’s Journey to the Western Islands (1775) show her to have been an acute reader. She is the subject of Marie Muir’s novel Dear Mrs Boswell (1953). im c g

• Pharm. Jour., 1911; ibid., August 1955, p. 155, and Sept. 1955, pp. 191–2 (obits); Shellard, E. J. (1982) ‘Some early women research workers in British Pharmacy 1886–1912’ (unpub. conf. paper, Univ. of Warwick, April). BORTHWICK, Jane Laurie, born Edinburgh 9 April 1813, died Edinburgh 7 Sept. 1897. BORTHWICK, Sarah, m. Findlater, born Edinburgh 26 Nov. 1823, died Torquay 25 Dec. 1907. Hymn writers and translators. Daughters of Sarah Finlay, and James Borthwick, insurance manager. Both parents were staunch members of the Church of Scotland. Jane, the more prolific sister, spent some months in Switzerland in the 1840s. Her father encouraged her to collaborate with Sarah on producing English translations of pietistic German hymns, first published in the Free Church Magazine in the late 1840s, then collected as Hymns from the Land of Luther in four series (1854, 1855, 1858, 1862; enlarged edn. 1884). These works, for which the Borthwick sisters are best known, confirmed their

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colleague Jane Gilmour Govan (1895–1982), known as Jean, she established Paisley Trained Nurses Association, which developed into Ashtrees maternity nursing home. From 1 March 1938, Peggy Boyd and Jean Govan became the first dedicated Scottish Air Ambulance nurses. Peggy Boyd flew for the first time three days later, on 4 March, when she accompanied a child with appendicitis from Islay. The nurses often had to fly in inclement weather at a time when aircraft, airfields and navigational aids lacked sophistication. During the Second World War, aircraft windows were blacked out and island air travel required a military permit. Jean Govan was offered an OBE in recognition of her work, but on learning that she was to be the only recipient she declined, saying, ‘We are both doing the same work’ (Hutchison 1996, p. 110). Wartime conditions meant a shortage of trained nurses for their nursing home, and they withdrew from air ambulance nursing in 1941. Volunteer nurses from Glasgow’s Southern General Hospital took over until 1993. The nursing home operated until 1951. Peggy Boyd then spent time in New Zealand, and from her return in 1952 until retiring in 1966, she was a health visitor in Ayr. ih

• Boswell, J. (1957–1989) The Yale editions of the private papers of James Boswell, esp. vol. 6; Brady, F. (1984) James Boswell: The Later Years 1769–1795; ODNB (2004); Pottle, F. A. (1966) James Boswell: The Earlier Years 1740–1769. BOWES-LYON, Lady Mildred Marion, m. Jessup, born Glamis Castle 6 Oct. 1868, died St Raphaël, France, 9 June 1897. Composer. Daughter of Frances Smith, and Claude Bowes-Lyon, 13th Earl of Strathmore. Frances, Lady Strathmore, created a concert party with her 11 children and gave charity concerts in Britain and abroad. Lady Mildred appeared as a singer but not a soloist, apparently overshadowed by her younger sister Lady Maude, a violinist. She suffered ‘delicate health’ from childhood, and the family was ‘practically ordered by medical advisers’ to leave Glamis and winter in Egypt (Dundee Courier, 1888). In 1890, she married Augustus Jessup, a wealthy American businessman. His lavish reconstruction of the 12th-century Schloss Lenzburg in Switzerland included a music room for his wife alongside the couple’s ornate bedroom. In April 1894, her opera, Etelinda, written to her husband’s libretto, was successfully presented in Florence, conducted by maestro Leopoldo Mugnone. Her local Scottish newspaper recorded that the composer’s name was withheld until the success of the performance was assured: on the second night, ‘in response to the calls of the audience, Lady Mildred came before the curtain and bowed her acknowledgements’. For a new and anonymous opera to impress the ‘fastidious musical public of Florence’ and be rewarded with ‘enthusiastic approval’ (Kirriemuir Observer) was an unusual feat. Two years after Lady Mildred’s sudden early death, Mugnone conducted more of her music at a concert in 1899, in the new museum at Bordighera, before Empress Frederick of Germany, indicating his continued high opinion of her. tf

• Ayr Advertiser, 19 May 1983; Hutchison, I. (1996) Air Ambulance, (2009) ‘The Scottish Air Ambulance Service, 1928–1948’, Journal of Transport History 30, 1, pp. 58–77. Private information: Janetta Thomson (niece). BOYD, Mary Syme, born Edinburgh 15 August 1910, died Edinburgh 30 Oct. 1997. Sculptor. Daughter of Clara Lepper of Co. Antrim, and Francis Darby Boyd, Professor of Clinical Medicine at the University of Edinburgh. While at ECA (1929–33), Mary Boyd was awarded travelling scholarships and studied in Paris (1931–2) under leading animalier Edouard Navellier. In 1934, she toured Europe, visiting Denmark, Sweden, Germany, Belgium and France. She sought out examples of modern sculpture, and admired wood carvings in churches, pewter and Danish silver. Her entire professional career was pursued from a house/studio at 14 Belford Mews, Edinburgh, interrupted only by war service with an ambulance team during the London blitz and in Edinburgh. Her notebooks about her European tour and her wartime service are extraordinary testaments. Ecclesiastical subjects influenced by Eric Gill, allegorical subjects and many naturalistic animal studies were among work exhibited in plaster, bronze, silver, carved wood and stone, at

• Glamis Castle Archives: Papers of Lord Strathmore and press cuttings file, courtesy of the archivist, Jane Anderson. Dundee Courier, 11 Dec. 1888; Kirriemuir Observer, 27 April 1894.

born Maybole 9 Nov. 1905, died Ayr 21 Sept. 1999. Air ambulance nurse. Daughter of Jessie Paton, and James Boyd, plumber. The sixth of seven children, Peggy Boyd trained as a nurse (SRN) at Biggart Hospital, Prestwick, and Royal Alexandra Infirmary, Paisley. In 1932 she qualified as a midwife (SCM). With her friend and

BOYD, Maggie Paton Davidson (Peggy),

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ary relationship with various spirits including the ‘good neighbours’ (fairies), and the fairy-like ‘seely wights’ (a phrase meaning ‘magical beings’). She performed rituals to summon spirits at an ‘eldritch’ (spooky) well on Arthur’s Seat. There she first learned her ‘craft’, when Maggie Denholm in Potterrow healed her of an illness. She used her visionary powers in healing ‘supernatural’ illnesses, fortune-telling, and finding lost and stolen goods; at her trial she was said to have practised for 24 years. She became involved in 1568 in a political conspiracy by Sir William Stewart of Luthrie and Archibald Napier of Merchiston, providing prophecies to the conspirators who hoped to free the imprisoned *Queen Mary. She predicted that Mary would escape, regain her throne and marry Stewart, but that Stewart would ultimately be overcome by his enemies. The conspirators also employed a Norwegian witch, whose prophecies Janet Boyman contradicted. On the conspiracy’s exposure in 1569 she fled to Irvine, but was captured and executed for witchcraft in 1572. Her indictment details her healing rituals and prophecies. JG

the RSA, SSA and RGIFA. Her work is represented in the NGS, private collections and churches. lamb • NGS and RCAHMS Archives: Mary Boyd’s notebooks and other papers. MSW; The Scotsman, 8 Nov. 1997 (obit.); 2 Jan. 1998 (feature). BOYLE, Eleanor Vere Crombie (E.V.B.), n. Gordon, born Auchlunies, Aberdeenshire, 1 May 1825, died Brighton 29 July 1916. Illustrator, writer. Daughter of Albinia Cumberland, amateur painter, and Alexander Gordon of Auchlunies, son of the 3rd Earl of Aberdeen. Youngest of nine children, Eleanor Gordon was tutored at home and later learned etching from Thomas Landseer. In 1845, she married Hon. and Rev. Richard Boyle (1812–86), vicar of Marston Bigot, Somerset, and Chaplain-inordinary to *Queen Victoria from 1846 to 1875. They had five children. Under the name ‘E.V.B.’ or Hon. Mrs Richard Boyle, Eleanor Boyle became a successful illustrator/author of popular Victorian and Edwardian publications, many of them for children: Child’s Play (1852) was the first of over twenty editions of her works. She specialised in detailed, narrative, magic realist images, some of which, including Hans Christian Andersen’s Fairy Tales (1872) and Beauty and the Beast (1875), were lavishly chromolithographed in editions by Sampson, Low, Marston, Low & Searle of London, in exemplary bindings. She also wrote and illustrated works about gardens and botany, exhibited with the SLA between 1859 and 1879 and also at the Dudley and Grosvenor Galleries. In Somerset, she was a patron of Frome School of Art and a benefactor of her husband’s parish, but after his death she lived in reduced circumstances, because of unwise investments by her son-in-law. RA

• Goodare, J. (2012) ‘The cult of the seely wights in Scotland’, Folklore, 123; Maxwell-Stuart, P. G. (2001) Satan’s Conspiracy: magic and witchcraft in sixteenth-century Scotland.

fl. (allegedly) 1297. Literary character. William Wallace’s attack on Lanark in May 1297, burning the town and killing its sheriff, is attested by reliable contemporary sources. The idea that this raid was motivated by Wallace’s desire to avenge the execution of a woman is no earlier than Wyntoun’s metrical chronicle of the early 15th century. Wyntoun mentioned a nameless lemman or paramour and inhabitant of Lanark executed by the sheriff for having harboured Wallace and helping him to avoid capture. Two generations later, ‘Blind’ Harry in his poem, Wallace, named this person as Marion Braidfute and described how Wallace fell in love with her despite himself, knowing his love would bring her danger, and how she pleaded in vain with him not to put his love for Scotland ahead of his love for her. Both narratives describe a literary character whose existence cannot be corroborated in any contemporary source. jef

BRAIDFUTE, Marion,

• Boyle, E. V. (1884) Days and Hours in a Garden. Beaumont, R. de (2000) ‘Bibliography of E.V.B.’, IBIS Spring Newsletter, (2002) ‘E.V.B. (The Hon. Mrs Eleanor Vere Boyle): an account of her life and a bibliography’, IBIS Jour., 2, 29 Nov.; Houfe, S. (1978) The Dictionary of British Book Illustrators 1800–1914; McGarvie, M. (1982) Eleanor Vere Boyle 1825–1916, Writer and Illustrator; ODNB (2004); The Scotsman, 21 August 1916 (obit.).

• Amours, F. J. (ed.) (1907) The Original Chronicle of Andrew of Wyntoun, vol. 5, pp. 300–4; McDiarmid, M. P. (ed.) (1968) Hary’s Wallace.

BOYMAN, Janet,

born before 1548, died Edinburgh, 1572. Visionary and conspirator accused of witchcraft. Janet Boyman lived in Edinburgh, married to William Steel in the Cowgate. She had a vision-

born Edinburgh 1 April 1894, died Edinburgh 23 Feb. 1986. Printing compositor.

BRECHIN, Ethel,

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Daughter of Mary Haig, domestic servant, and George Brechin, butler. The youngest of nine children, Ethel Brechin went to Canonmills School, then, at 14, following two sisters, she joined the printing-house of Morrison & Gibb as an apprentice hand-setter. This opportunity was briefly open to Edinburgh girls (1880s–1910), and the city’s 900-odd female compositors were among the few women in this skilled trade in Britain until the Equal Opportunities legislation of the 1970s. It was better-paid than alternatives such as dressmaking, but since women were still paid less than men, and thus under-cutting male wages, the male union campaigned successfully for a ban on women entrants from 1910. However, Ethel Brechin was able to work out her time to the age of 70, living at home, never marrying, and winning prizes for ballroom dancing. She also loved her work, progressing to monotyping and proof-reading. ‘I would have worked weekends if they’d have let me’, she said in old age. sr

• Carmichael, A. (1900) Carmina Gadelica; McNeill, F. M. (1959) The Silver Bough; Towill, E. S. (1983) The Saints of Scotland. BROADWOOD, Lucy Etheldred, born Melrose 9 August 1858, died Canterbury 22 August 1929. Folk-song collector and singer. Daughter of Juliana Maria Birch, and Henry Fowler Broadwood, piano manufacturer. Educated privately, Lucy Broadwood became a leading figure in folk-song collection and analysis. She collected folk-songs throughout the British Isles and was a founder member of the Folk-Song Society, holding the honorary secretaryship from its relaunch in 1904 until 1908, editing its Journal until 1927, and collaborating with major figures in the field such as Percy Grainger, Gavin Greig, Frank Howes and Frank Kidson. ‘The mainstay’ of a talk by Ralph Vaughan Williams, for which she sang the examples, she was his ‘admired colleague, and an adviser in Ralph’s work with folk songs’ (U. Vaughan Williams 1964, pp. 62–3). He described her as ‘an excellent pianist and a most artistic singer’ and wrote of her compositions that though light in texture they showed ‘considerable musical imagination’ (R. Vaughan Williams 1948, p. 136). Lucy Broadwood was also a poet, artist and cartoonist, contributing to Punch and The Globe. She was involved in the Broadwood piano manufacturing company, and took an intense interest in the family history. Although she was based in London and the family home at Lyne House, her Scottish background was always of importance to her. In childhood she regularly holidayed in Melrose; in 1906–7 she collected tunes in Arisaig, and she noted tunes from exiled Gaels in London, including Farquhar MacRae and John MacLennan. In 1908–11 she collaborated with *Frances Tolmie, for whose own collection she wrote a note on the Gaelic scale system. Her Gaelic material is on extended loan to the School of Scottish Studies. jp

• Reynolds, S. (1989) Britannica’s Typesetters. Personal knowledge.

possibly born Dundalk or Kildare, c. ad 452, died 525. Reputedly daughter of a bond-maid or slave, and Dubhach, Prince of Ulster and pagan bard. Although of Irish birth, Bride features strongly in Scottish folklore and is seen as inter-mingling Celtic goddess and Christian saint. The Day of Bride, 1 February, is the Celtic festival of Spring, linked closely with Candlemas (2 February). For the Gael, she was the patron of poetry, smith-work and healing. Christians revered her as a fertility figure who cared for the home and was aid-woman at births. A much-told legend describes how Bride, transported from Iona to Bethlehem, in the role of inn-keeper’s daughter, delivered Mary of the infant Jesus. In the Gaidhealtachd she is commonly known as Miume Chroisd, foster-mother to Christ, and Ban-chuidheachaidh, the aid-woman (or midwife) of Mary. Many Scottish ­midwives regard Bride as ‘their’ saint. Incantations associated with Bride cover issues particularly to do with fertility, the land, and the hearts and lives of the people, especially a happy, safe home with enough food, and safety at birth. Many Scottish churches carry her name. Her cross, traditionally made of woven straw, typifies the star which led Bride to the infant Jesus. lr

BRIDE (BRIDGET), Saint,

• Surrey History Centre, Woking: Broadwood papers (material on/of Lucy Broadwood, diaries, journals, photographs: 2185/EB/9); BL and Vaughan Williams Memorial Library: copies of wax cylinder recordings. Broadwood, L. E. with Fuller-Maitland, J. A. (1893) English County Songs, (1911) ‘Additional note on the Gaelic scale system’, Journal of the Folk-Song Society 16, vol. IV/3, pp. 154–5. Bassin, E. (1965) ‘Lucy Broadwood, 1858–1929’, Scottish Studies, 9, 2, pp. 145–52; Jones, L. W. (1995) ‘Lucy Etheldred Broadwood: poet and song writer’, English Dance and Song 57, 4, pp. 2–3; ODNB (2004); Vaughan Williams, R. (1948) ‘Lucy Broadwood 1858–1929’, Journal of the English Folk

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Margaret Brodie spent retirement with her sister Jean in a redesigned 17th-century farmhouse near Lochwinnoch. Her Fellowship of the GSA (1995) (which she dismissed as ‘nonsense’) honoured ‘one of the School’s most distinguished female alumni’ and ‘one of Scotland’s leading creative forces of her generation’ (ibid.). RC

Dance and Song Society V, 3, pp. 136–8; Vaughan Williams, U. (1964) R.V.W., pp. 62–3, 89–90, 140, 179; Wainwright, D. (1982) Broadwood by Appointment. BRODIE, Margaret Brash, born Glasgow 10 June 1907, died Beith 14 April 1997. Architect. Daughter of Jane Brash, and John Brodie, civil engineer. Margaret Brodie’s parents believed strongly in women’s education: one sister studied at GSA, another became a dentist. Margaret Brodie went from Glasgow High School for Girls to the Glasgow School of Architecture, one of the few women in the first BScArch cohort in 1926, under the professorship of T. H. Hughes, husband of *Edith Burnet. At the British School of Art in Rome on a scholarship, her fellow students included Robert Mathew and Basil Spence. She was the first student to graduate with first-class honours in Design (1931). Her drawings for a proposed Paisley hospital, submitted by Glasgow practice Watson, Salmond & Gray, brought her to the notice of T. S. Tait, dominant partner of Burnet, Tait & Lorne. In 1932 she joined their London office (see Burnet, Edith) and worked on their most influential Scottish commissions: as Tait’s senior assistant on St Andrew’s House, Edinburgh (1933–9), ‘the most impressive work of architecture in Scotland between the wars’, (Gifford et al. 1984, p. 441), and as site architect during construction of the Empire Exhibition, Bellahouston, Glasgow (1936–8). There, alongside day-to-day site supervision of over 150 buildings by disparate, often leading, architects, Margaret Brodie designed the Women of the Empire Pavilion, a ‘modest gem’ of ‘beautifully simple design, cleverly squeezed onto its tight corner’ (Baxter 1997, p. 22). A haven for women visitors, with a non-smoking restaurant, its exhibits concerned women’s fashions and welfare, in contrast to her own professional contribution to the Exhibition – though apparently she wore ‘the largest picture hat’ to the opening. During the war, she designed aerodromes in East Anglia for the Air Ministry, then joined Burnet, Tait & Lorne’s Edinburgh office. She combined lecturing at GSA with private practice: work included St Martin’s Church, Port Glasgow (1957). She advised engineering firms, including Cowan & Linn (Grant’s distillery at Grangestone, Girvan, 1963), and sat for 20 years on the Church of Scotland’s Artistic Questions Committee. A ‘forceful, demanding and kindly’ teacher, with a ‘pawky sense of humour and highly refined sense of irony’ (ibid.),

• Baxter, N. (1997) ‘Margaret Brodie’, RIAS Newsletter, June; Colquhoun, A. (1997) ‘Margaret Brash Brodie’, Soc. Arch. Historians of GB Newsletter, 61, p. 6; Gifford, J., McWilliam, C. and Walker, D. (eds) (1984) The Buildings of Scotland: Edinburgh; Glasgow Herald, 19 April 1997 (obit.); Kinchin, P. and Kinchin, J. (1988) Glasgow’s Great Exhibitions; McKean, C. (1987) The Scottish Thirties: an architectural introduction. Additional information: Diane Watters. BROOKSBANK, Mary Watson, n. Soutar, born Aberdeen 15 Dec. 1897, died Dundee 16 March 1978. Mill worker, revolutionary, poet and songwriter. Daughter of Roseann Gillan, domestic servant, fish gutter and mill worker, and Alexander Soutar, dock labourer and trade union activist. One of five children, in around 1907 Mary Soutar moved with her family to Dundee, where she attended St Andrew’s School. Like many others in a city dependent upon female and child labour, she first entered a jute textile spinning mill as a shifter aged 11, an experience reflected in her song ‘Oh, dear me’. By 1912 she was working in the same mill as her mother and taking part in her first industrial dispute. Over three decades, she, like many other Dundee women, moved from mill to mill as well as taking casual jobs, fruit picking and cleaning offices. In 1920 she joined the CP, organising the lobbies and demonstrations for unemployment benefits that culminated in riots in Dundee in September 1921. She led local CP campaigns, including resisting the evictions of rent defaulters and representing unemployed workers at Labour Exchange tribunals. On 3 October 1924, she married Ernest Brooksbank (c. 1891–1943), a journeyman tailor. Demonstrations against mass unemployment in Dundee in 1931 that she helped to organise were noteworthy for the presence of working women. When mounted police charged a city centre rally where she was a speaker, she was arrested and charged with incitement to riot. In total, she served three prison sentences as a result of her political activity. During the last of her prison sentences, she began to write poetry. Mary Brooksbank was expelled from the CP in 1933. She said she doubted the party leadership after hearing reports from women members who

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had visited the Soviet Union, but tensions also arose locally from her work with the very successful women’s section. In 1943, her husband fell seriously ill and died. Five years later she was nursing her sick mother and was no longer in paid employment. At this time she began to write song lyrics as well as poetry. From an early age she had played the violin, appearing in benefit concerts during the First World War, but it was after the Second World War that she gained a reputation as a musician and song writer. In the 1960s and 1970s, supported by the folk singer Ewan MacColl, her songs reached a national audience and she appeared on radio and television in Scotland. Mary Brooksbank continues to be celebrated as a lyricist; her contribution to Scotland’s radical tradition is becoming recognised: ‘Politicians and rulers/Are richly rewarded,/ But in one woman’s life/Is our history recorded’ (Brooksbank 1982, p. 30). GRS

to a clan – plain Daphne, glamorous Maggie, lanky Hen, attractive Joe, bookish Horace, the twins and the bairn – Maw epitomises what Scottish society once admired in women: selflessness, dependability and respectability. Maw regulates life for the inhabitants of 10 Glebe Street (in an unspecified town – not Edinburgh); she lives through her family. Apart from forays to the shops, she has no interests of her own; maintaining standards and ‘keeping up appearances’ is her mission. For visitors, Maw brings out the good china and minds her manners but often things go wrong and she ends up ‘affrontit’, in the process defying modernity and retaining the affection of generations of readers. cec /als • The Broons (alternate years); website: www.thatsbraw.co.uk BROWN, Anna, n. Gordon, born Aberdeen 24 August 1747, died Falkland 11 July 1810. Singer of traditional ballads. Daughter of Lillias Forbes of Disblair, and Thomas Gordon, Aberdeen professor. Raised in Aberdeen, Anna Gordon spent time on an estate in the Braemar district with her mother’s sister, Anne Forbes Farquharson, who had learned ballads from nurses and servants. She learned her ballads largely from her aunt, but also from her mother, who would have picked them up at Disblair, and from a servant in their Aberdeen house. Also known as ‘Mrs Brown of Falkland’, having in 1788 married Rev. Andrew Brown (1744–1805), minister of Falkland, Fife, she is the archetypal source of Scots ballads, much as Sir Walter Scott is the archetypal collector and publisher. She left a group of 42 ballads over which she had complete bardic mastery. During her life, her ballads were eagerly copied by collectors, especially Robert Jamieson and William Tytler. Sir Walter Scott published several in his Minstrelsy of the Scottish Borders, and many of them are in Francis Child’s collection. She would sing, but was not comfortable with publishing, while Scott readily published ballads that he had not composed. In 1802, she expressed anger at Scott’s publication of her name as a source of her often blunt and amorous ballads, written from a female point of view, and this marks a turning point for Scotswomen, newly infected with a fear of impropriety and of ­publishing. ds

• Dundee Central Library: Lamb Collection; Univ. of Dundee: MS 103/38. Mary Brooksbank, interviewed by Hamish Henderson, Oct., 1964 and April 1965, School of Scottish Studies, SA1964.074.075; SA1965.162.A3. Brooksbank, M. (1966) Nae Sae Lang Syne: a tale of this city, (1982) Sidlaw Breezes. Bowman, D. and Bowman, E. (eds) (1967) Breaking the Fetters: the memoirs of Bob Stewart; DWT; Gordon, E. (1991) Women and the Labour Movement in Scotland 1850–1914; Knox, W. W. J. (2006) The Lives of Scottish Women; *ODNB (2004); Phillips, D. (1967) Appreciation, The Scots Magazine, March, reprinted in (1982) Introduction to Sidlaw Breezes, pp. 7–10; Smith, G. (1995) ‘Protest is better for infants: motherhood, health and welfare in a women’s town, c. 1911–1931’, Oral History, 23, 1, pp. 63–70. BROON, Maw, ‘born’ Dundee 8 March 1936. Matriarch. Brainchild of Robert D. Low, managing editor, and Dudley D. Watkins, illustrator, Sunday Post. In 1936, the matriarch of The Broons comic strip, Maw Broon, sprang into full-grown existence in the Fun Section of the D. C. Thomson newspaper Sunday Post. Maw and family, who speak a broad Scots dialect, owe their popularity largely to the talent of Dudley Watkins (1907–69), who was such a successful comic artist that, unusually, he was allowed to sign his strips. As a Scottish icon, Maw Broon is instantly recognisable; a big woman, wearing pinny and sensible shoes, her hair is scraped into a bun and her bosom is ample. Wife to meek but mischievous Paw, daughter-in-law to roguish Grandpaw and mother

• Harvard Univ.: Brown MSS; NLS: Acc. 11737, Brown MS. Buchan, D. (1972) The Ballad and the Folk (Bibl.); Rieuwerts, S. (ed.) (2011) The Ballad Repertoire of Anna Gordon, Mrs Brown of Falkland; ODNB (2004)

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Janet Brown’s first public appearance, aged 13, at Glasgow’s Savoy Cinema, led to her first radio performance. Leaving Rutherglen Academy early, she toured, parentally encouraged, with Hughie Green’s company. During the Second World War, in Stars in Battledress, she worked with future stars like Tony Hancock and Harry Secombe, then, after post-war West End appearances, her radio variety career developed. While starring in Jack Hylton’s 1946 Scarborough summer show, she met and married fellow-actor Peter Butterworth (1919–79). In 1949, alongside her own BBC Home Service Scotland radio series, Janet Brown’s screen debut was Floodtide, a romantic Clydeside film. Covering comedy, seaside summer seasons and pantomime – as a distinguished Principal Boy – her acting flourished. Meanwhile, she became a regularly televised impressionist, her ‘Margaret Thatcher’ being particularly famous. A Conservative herself, that impression was never malicious: the Bond film For Your Eyes Only (1981) cast her as Prime Minister. Disciplined, versatile and perceptive, Brown appeared in satire (The News Huddlines, radio 1975–2001), Royal Variety Shows, and straight stage and television drama (1990–2009). IB

(see Gordon, Anna); Symonds, D. A. (1997) Weep Not for Me. BROWN, Dorothy

(fl. 1644)

see DIORBHAIL NIC A’BHRUTHAINN

n. Lynch, MBE, born Dalmuir 27 Nov. 1928, died Glasgow 28 June 2016. Teacher, activist, rent strike organiser. Daughter of Dublin-born Rose Dempsey, and John Lynch, shipyard labourer. Betty Lynch grew up in Clydebank, in difficult circumstances. Her father died in 1929, and when she was 12, her younger brother accidentally killed their mother when handling his uncle’s gun. Sent to live with aunts, Betty Lynch left school as soon as possible to work at Singer’s Sewing Machines. At 17 she married David Brown (b. 1925) and they had three children, one of whom became the wellknown TV actress Barbara Rafferty. With little formal education, Betty Brown dreamed of becoming a teacher. In her mid-40s she enrolled in college, took Highers, and trained at Jordanhill. She then taught at Gavinburgh Primary School, Old Kirkpatrick. At the same time, she was an active community politician, who famously ‘got things done’, described by the press as ‘Battling Betty Brown’. She first encountered politics in Clydebank Women’s Guild and went on to become a Labour councillor and eventually Baillie of her home town. In 1971 she marched alongside Jimmy Reid during the Upper Clyde Shipbuilders’ sit-in. They once more co-operated to launch the 1973 Clydebank rent strike against the Heath government’s Housing Act, raising council rents, but lost that particular battle. As a peace campaigner, Betty Brown succeeded in having the Dove of Peace incorporated into the Clydebank coat of arms. She campaigned for local causes to improve citizens’ lives. Garnethill Park, once a rubbish tip, is one of her lasting legacies, as a park, children’s play area and multicultural community centre. She was awarded an MBE and named Evening Times Scotswoman of the Year, 1995. SR

BROWN, Elizabeth Philomena (Betty),

• The Guardian, 28 May 2011, The Daily Telegraph, 28 May 2011, The Independent, 31 May 2011 (obits); eODNB. Personal knowledge. BROWN, Marion, born Crawfordjohn, Lanarkshire, 2 July 1843, died Sanquhar 7 Oct. 1915. Telephone exchange operator and correspondent. Daughter of Margaret Glencross (Glencorse), and George Brown, dairyman. The second of three children, Marion Brown was forced to spend prolonged periods confined to bed and also experienced short-term blindness and speech loss. This originated from an unspecified condition, which she first encountered around the age of five. After her mother died in 1850, George Brown remarried, and Marion Brown spent her youth in the home of her aunt, Agnes Scott (n. Glencross). She became an integral member of the Glencross family where, often bed-bound, she sewed and conducted correspondence with family members, particularly those who had emigrated to Dunmore, Pennsylvania. Although herself disabled, she later cared for her ageing aunt, Agnes. During this period they lived with Agnes Scott’s son, Tam, and his wife, Robina Boyle. Theirs was a large family, and the resulting tensions led to Marion Brown’s moving

• Sklair, L. (1975) ‘The struggle against the Housing Finance Act’, Socialist Register 12, pp. 250–92; Glasgow Evening Times, 5 July 2016, The Herald, 5 July 2016 (obits). BROWN, Janet McLuckie, m. Butterworth, born

Rutherglen 14 Dec. 1923, died Hove 27 May 2011. Actor, comedian and impressionist. Daughter of Helen McLuckie Russell, and Andrew Brown, sheet-iron worker. 54

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out. Still experiencing mobility problems, she took up her first regular employment in 1892 as Sanquhar’s first telephone exchange operator. She had longed to emigrate to the USA and, through her correspondence, maintained the family link with Dunmore for forty years. ih

• Brown, M. (1979) Alive in the 1900s. Brown, C. G. (1999) ‘Sport and the Scottish Office in the 20th century’, European Sports History Review, vol. I, pp. 184–202; Scottish Sports Council, Annual Report 1983–4, ‘Obituary: Mrs M. K. Brown MBE’.

• ‘Correspondence of Marion Brown, Sanquhar, Dumfriesshire, to Dunmore, Pennsylvania, 1852–1903’, private collection of L. M. Richards, unpublished 1994 transcription courtesy of P. L. Richards. Hutchison, I. (2002) ‘Disability in nineteenth century Scotland – the case of Marion Brown’, Univ. Sussex Jour. Contemp. Hist., 5 (http://www.sussex.ac.uk/history/1-4-1. html)

BROWN, Meredith Jemima,

born probably Glasgow 1846, died Lisson Grove, London 5 Nov. 1908. Founder and honorary superintendent of the Shaftesbury Institute, London. Daughter of Catherine Dyce (sister of the painter William Dyce), and Rev. Dr David Brown, Free Church minister. Raised in Aberdeen, Meredith Brown studied music and singing. Following the death of her mother, she went to London, where she determined to alleviate the conditions of poor factory girls and provide a safety net for those who might drift into prostitution. She researched their problems by disguising herself as a factory worker and, with a friend, went round ‘low music saloons and gin drinking dens’. She wrote of her experiences in a book, Only a Factory Girl (n.d. no copy located), the proceeds of which enabled her to set up the Shaftesbury Institute in Lisson Grove, where poorly paid women could spend a comfortable, teetotal evening and attend classes, and where women arriving in London seeking work could get cheap, safe bed and breakfast. She organised this and related endeavours with success. atm

n. Webster, MBE, born Inverness 21 May 1900, died Earlsferry, Fife, 19 Nov. 1983. General Secretary of Scottish Council of Physical Recreation. Daughter of Mary Hughes, teacher, and William Webster, CBE, political secretary. May Webster spent her early childhood in Glasgow. Her father was General Secretary of the SLF and the household had a ‘very political atmosphere’ (Brown 1979, p. 3). She and her sister Muriel attended George Watson’s Ladies’ College, Edinburgh, where she developed an interest in sport. Both sisters were students at Anstey College of Physical Education, Warwickshire, and Muriel Webster later joined the staff, then became principal. In August 1933, May Webster married Thomas Gow Brown but they divorced seven months later. From the 1930s, she was an influential figure in physical activity promotion in Scotland, for all ages and classes, spending time working among depressed mining communities in Fife. Fitness, fun and friendship were her aims. An officer in both Edinburgh and Glasgow Keep Fit Movements, she helped set up the Scottish Women’s Keep Fit Association, was secretary of the RSCDS, and broadcast ‘Early Morning Exercises’ with the BBC Home Service during the war. In 1945, she became secretary of the new Scottish arm of the Central Council of Physical Recreation, a senior civil service post. Under her leadership, this and its successor, the Scottish Council of Physical Recreation (1953), made significant developments in Scottish sport and physical activity. A ‘committed evangelical for women’s sports’ at a time when most competitive sports were male-dominated (Brown 1999, p. 186), May Brown also introduced new sports such as ski-ing and orienteering. Awarded MBE in 1963, she retired in 1968. iar

BROWN, Mary Katherine Barbara (May),

• Brown, M., Work as above. In Memoriam (1897) Aberdeen, p. 114; In Memoriam (1908) Aberdeen, p. 20; MacLeod, J. (1910) Reminiscences, ­pp. 79–80; ODNB (2004); WWW, 1908.

fl. 1306–57. Scottish resistance leader. Daughter of *Marjory, Countess of Carrick, and Robert Bruce, 5th Lord of Annandale. During a long, eventful life, Christian Bruce had two known husbands: Sir Christopher Seton (c. 1278–1306) and Andrew Moray of Bothwell (1298–1338), both staunch supporters of the Bruce political faction. She lost each in turn to war and experienced first-hand Edward I’s fierce determination to crush her brother, Robert I. Captured at Tain in June 1306 with her sister-in-law, her niece *Marjory Bruce, and *Isobel of Fife, Countess of Buchan, she began a lengthy captivity in the Gilbertine nunnery at Sixhills (Lincolnshire), only days after Seton’s execution. Imprisoned until 1314, she remained unwaveringly loyal to Robert’s cause. In the early 1330s, Christian Bruce and Andrew Moray were active against Edward III, and in 1333

BRUCE, Christian,

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she held the castle of Kildrummy against English forces on Moray’s behalf. She remained active in Anglo-Scottish politics until her death and worked closely with her sister *Isabella Bruce, queen dowager of Norway, to facilitate Scoto-Norwegian trade. CJN

husband, Mary Brunton read widely, in philosophy, history and literature. In 1811, she published, anonymously, her first novel, Self-Control, dedicated to *Joanna Baillie, and in 1814, Discipline. These titles may lack appeal to the modern reader, but are unjustly neglected today. Writing from an evangelical perspective, Mary Brunton emphasised that ‘the regulation of the passions is the province, it is the triumph of RELIGION’ (Brunton [1811], Preface). Yet her heroines are self-reliant and determined, and are educated in the economic realities of life. Laura Montreville, in Self-Control, resists the stratagems of a seducer, searches for employment and, when finally abducted to Canada, implausibly escapes in a canoe. In Discipline, wilful, spoilt Ellen Percy, after her father’s bankruptcy and suicide, learns to abandon the corrupt fashionable world and to live by moral and religious principle. She too leaves London for Edinburgh looking for work, learns Gaelic (as did the author), and finds refuge in the Highlands. Mary Brunton’s final unfinished ­fragment, Emmeline, attempted a difficult subject: the unhappy life of a woman divorced for adultery and remarried. In May 1819, an anonymous reviewer wrote of almost wishing that ‘the pure and high soul of the author’ had not embarked on ‘such a sad tale of profligacy and wretchedness’ (Anon. 1819, p. 189). She was involved in Edinburgh’s literary and philanthropic circles with *Eliza Fletcher, and her early death in childbirth was mourned in the Edinburgh press. Contemporaries – including Jane Austen – greatly enjoyed her work. SelfControl went through four editions by 1812, ‘one of the few unqualified successes [among novels] to come from Scotland before Waverley’ (Garside 2000, pp. 59, 79). JR

• Barrow, G. W. S. (1988) Robert Bruce; Neville, C. J. (1993) ‘Widows of war . . .’, in S. S. Walker (ed.) Wife and Widow in Medieval England; Scotichron., vol. 7; ODNB (2004). BRUCE, Isabella see ISABELLA, Queen of Norway

(c. 1272–1358)

born 1294, buried Paisley Abbey c. 1317. Daughter of Isobel of Mar (see Elizabeth de Burgh) and Robert I. Marjory Bruce, with *Christian Bruce and other royal family members, was sent to Kildrummy Castle and then to Tain for refuge in spring 1306, following Robert Bruce’s seizure of the throne, but was captured soon afterwards. As with several other noblewomen who openly defied him, Edward I ordered her confined to a cage, this one in the Tower of London. He later relaxed this to honourable captivity in the Gilbertine nunnery of Watton (Yorkshire). She was released in 1314, one of several noblewomen, including *Elizabeth de Burgh, her stepmother, exchanged for English prisoners from Bannockburn. That year she married Walter Stewart (c. 1296–1327), whose family had served the crown loyally for generations. In 1315 it was agreed she would inherit the crown if both Robert I and his brother Edward died without male heirs. She died c. 1317, giving birth to the future Robert II. cjn

BRUCE, Marjory,

• Barrow, G. W. S. (1988) Robert Bruce ; Neville, C. J. (1993) ‘Widows of war . . .’, in S. S. Walker (ed.) Wife and Widow in Medieval England; Nicholson, R. (1978) Scotland, the Later Middle Ages; Riley, H. T. (ed.) (1865) Willelmi Rishanger . . . Chronica et Annales; Scotichron, vol. 6.

• NRS: GD1/1153, Papers of Alexander Brunton; Orkney Archives, Kirkwall: Balfour papers. Brunton, M., Works as above. Anon. (May 1819) ‘Emmeline’, Blackwood’s Edinburgh Review, V, pp. 183–92; Chapman, R. W. (ed.) (1959) Jane Austen’s Letters to her Sister Cassandra and Others; ECSWW; Garside, P. et al. (2000) The English Novel 1770–1829: a bibliographical survey of prose fiction published in the British Isles, vol. II: 1800–29; HSWW; McKerrow, M. (2001) Mary Brunton: the forgotten Scottish novelist; ODNB (2004); Rendall, J. (2005) ‘“Women that would plague me with rational conversation’”, aspiring women and Scottish Whigs, c. 1790–1830’, in S. Knott and B. Taylor (eds) Feminism and the Enlightenment; NWSLR (Bibl.).

BRUNTON, Mary, n. Balfour, born island of Burray, Orkney, 1 Nov. 1778, died Edinburgh 19 Dec. 1818. Novelist. Daughter of Frances Ligonier, and Thomas Balfour, soldier and Orkney landowner. Mary Balfour attended school in Edinburgh for seven years, returning to Orkney in 1795. Against her family’s wishes, in 1798 she married a visiting minister, Alexander Brunton (1772–1854). In 1802 they moved to Edinburgh when her husband became minister of the New Greyfriars Church, and later Professor of Hebrew Languages at the University of Edinburgh. Encouraged by her

BRYANS, Anne Margaret, n. Gilmour,

DBE, DStJ, born Edinburgh 29 Oct. 1919, died Lundin 56

BRYSON BRYSON, Agnes Ann, born New York State, USA, c. 1831, died Ayrshire 13 Dec. 1907. Quaker minister and temperance reformer, Glasgow. Ann Bryson came to Scotland as a child and made her home in Glasgow for over 40 years. A prominent member of the Society of Friends, she was involved with the women’s monthly meeting, acted as an overseer and was recorded as a minister. That commitment was central to her social reform work. Her friend and fellow reformer, Mary White (1827–1903), was also a Quaker. Ann and Mary lived ‘as sisters’ in Glasgow for 34 years (Society of Friends 1909, p. 13). From the 1870s, Ann Bryson, with the help of Mary White, was at the centre of temperance reform in Glasgow. In 1873 she helped to establish the Glasgow Prayer Union branch of the Scottish Christian Union, the largest single-sex women’s temperance organisation in Scotland. She was secretary and superintendent of the prison visiting, rescue and evangelical committees. Her most important project was the Whitevale Mission Shelter (originally the Prison Gate Mission) which she established in Glasgow in 1877 and which was used by the SCU as an ‘inebriate home’ for women: female prisoners were invited upon release to enter the mission in order to become teetotallers. Somewhat retiring when it came to public speaking, Ann Bryson often relied on Mary White to express their opinions; she was, however, renowned as one of the most charitable and influential Quaker women in Scotland. mks

Links, Fife 21 April 2004. Red Cross administrator and hospital governor. Daughter of Mary Louise Lambert, and Sir John Gilmour, politician. Anne Gilmour was educated at home. Always energetic, she joined the British Red Cross Society (BRCS) in 1927, when there seemed little possibility of a future war. Olive Prentice, niece and goddaughter of Florence Nightingale, was her commander and inspired her to qualify as a VAD nurse. She later became a VAD commandant and, on 23 June 1932, married John Reginald Bryans (1906–90), a naval officer, with whom she had one son (b. 1933). Anne Bryans spent much of her life in the service of the BRCS and the Order of St John of Jerusalem, where she demonstrated remarkable organisational skills. She became a voluntary member of staff of the BRCS in 1938, and in 1942 when a British Red Cross Commission for the Middle East was set up to support sick and wounded servicemen, she was appointed deputy commissioner, leading a party of hospital welfare officers to Cairo. In Jan. 1945 she was promoted to commissioner, the only woman to be appointed to such a role during the Second World War. After the war she continued this work as first Director of the St John and BRCS service hospitals welfare department. She became Deputy Chairman of the BRCS Executive Committee, 1953–64, and ViceChairman, 1964–76, with many international responsibilities. Anne Bryans was appointed to several public posts, making her considerable knowledge and experience especially available to the new National Health Service. She was on a number of hospital boards of governors but was particularly known for her work as chair of the Royal Free Hospital board, playing a significant role in the building of its new hospital in Hampstead, which opened in 1974. BEM

• Library of the Society of Friends, London: ‘Dictionary of Quaker Biography’ (folio, n.d.); Glasgow City Archives: TD 955/1/1, Glasgow Prayer Union Minutes (1881–98, 1905, 1914). Bryson, A. (1878) ‘Prison Gate Mission, Glasgow’, Monthly Friend, 9, 110 (July), pp. 104–5. Smitley, M. (2002) ‘ “Woman’s Mission”: the temperance and women’s suffrage movements in Scotland, c. 1870–1914’, PhD, Univ. of Glasgow; Society of Friends (1909) ‘Agnes Ann Bryson’, Annual Monitor, 96, pp. 12–14; White, M. (1877) ‘Proposed “Prison Gate Mission” for Glasgow’, The Monthly Record, 8, 102 (Nov.), pp. 171–2.

• IWM: Private papers of Dame Anne Bryans, DBE, DStJ; interview with Anne Bryans (14 Oct. 1977), catalogue no. 976, available at www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/ object/80000969; BRCS Archives, London: RCC/1/12/9/34, papers relating to Dame Anne Bryans; JCM/6/13/4, interview with Dame Anne Bryans (c. 1980s); other papers and photographs. Cambray, P. G. and Briggs, G. G. B. (1949) (eds) The Official Record of the Humanitarian Services of the War Organisation of the British Red Cross Society and Order of St John of Jerusalem, 1939–1947; ODNB (2004) (Bibl.)

BRYSON, Elizabeth Horne Bain, n. Macdonald, born

Dundee 19 August 1880, died London c. 1969. Physician, broadcaster. Daughter of Elizabeth Bain, teacher, and Donald Macdonald, sometime cashier and poet. Despite a family history of poverty, Elizabeth Macdonald graduated, aged 19, from the University of St Andrews with first-class honours in English literature. An early student in the new medical school at University College, Dundee, as well as 57

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Anna Buchan was the second of six children, and her family relationships were deeply significant to her. Her father delighted in fairy stories and read to the children from Scottish classics. In 1888, he was called to John Knox Church in the Gorbals, Glasgow, and the family removed to neighbouring Crosshill. Anna Buchan was educated at Queen’s Park Academy, Hutcheson’s Grammar School for Girls where she won a prize in English Literature, in Edinburgh, and at Queen Margaret College Glasgow. Through charitable work associated with the manse, she developed habits of generosity – later fuelled by the financial independence writing gave her (Tweedsmuir in A. Buchan, 1950) – and sociability, meeting a range of people from the Gorbals’ poor to Glasgow’s cultured intelligentsia. Throughout her life, she entertained, conversed and was an excellent listener, able to encourage anyone in difficulty. In 1906, her brother Walter became Clerk to the Town Council in Peebles, which appeared in her fiction as ‘Priorsford’. She accompanied him to the Bank House, organising the household there for the rest of her life. Both parents came to live there. During the nights when she sat up with her mother, during an illness, she began Olivia in India (1913), her first novel, based on her visit to her brother William in India in 1907. Her mother survived until 1937, but her father died in 1911; William died in 1912 and her young brother Alastair was killed at Arras in 1917. Anna Buchan did not marry. An early biographer wrote that ‘every life has a private agony’ (Reekie in A. Buchan, 1950), but whether she was romantically attached to anyone remains a matter of speculation. Her life now revolved around her mother, Walter, and the family of her brother John Buchan (1875–1940), the novelist and diplomat, whom she loved and admired, visiting him in Canada after he had become Governor-General. He understood the pressures she was under as an intelligent woman with no task which matched her abilities. Throughout her life, she was a great lover of theatre and a highly able public speaker at charitable functions, often recounting amusing anecdotes in Scots. Under the pseudonym ‘O. Douglas’, Anna Buchan’s many novels, often set in the Borders, sold so well that along with A. S. M. Hutchinson, A. E. W. Mason, ‘Sapper’, and John Buchan, she was among Hodder and Stoughton’s ‘Big Five’ authors (Forrester 1995). Best-known titles include The Setons (1917) and Penny Plain (1920). She rose at 5 am to do housework so that later in the morning

attending Bute (now St Andrews) Medical School, she graduated MBChB in 1905, completed an MD and published her thesis in 1907. She was not offered a hospital appointment because of her sex. It appeared to be ‘the dawn of nothing’, she wrote (quoted Dyhouse 1998, p. 335), so she left for New Zealand, entering private practice as an assistant. She was a school medical officer during the First World War, and returned to general practice in 1918 after marrying Dr Robert Bryson (1877–1934). Both their children became doctors. Elizabeth Bryson was a prominent member of the League of Mothers, founded in 1926 to promote the Christian upbringing of children. A contemporary described her as ‘a born organiser and excelling in all things domestic, as a good Scots woman should’ (Coates 1969, p. 44). By then, in Wellington, she was practising her speciality of gynaecology and diseases of women, with her husband’s support: ‘Women flocked to consult her’ (ibid., p. 44). In the 1930s she studied psychology at the Tavistock in London, applying this in her pioneering research on the psychosomatic approach in gynaecology (Bryson 1945). Back in New Zealand in 1939, she broadcast eight radio talks on nutrition for the Health Department. She retired in 1953. Her autobiography (1966) has been used to illustrate both the power of books in the lives of working people (Rose 2001) and the vocational ambitions of women of her generation seeking a medical education (Dyhouse 1998). GRS • Bryson, E. (1945) ‘The psychosomatic approach in gynaecological practice’, Practitioner, 155, pp. 378–84, (1959) The History of the League of Mothers in New Zealand, (1966) Look Back in Wonder. Coates, V. (1969) ‘Elizabeth Bryson obituary’, NZ Med. Jour., 70, pp. 44–5; Dow, D. (2003) ‘The Long Locum: health propaganda in New Zealand’, NZ Med. Jour., 14, March; Dyhouse, C. (1998) ‘Driving ambitions: women in pursuit of a medical education, 1890–1939’, Women’s History Review, 7, 3, pp. 321–43, (1995) No Distinction Of Sex?: Women in British universities, 1870–1939; DWT; Rose, J. (2001) The Intellectual Life of the British Working Classes; Taylor, W. ‘A Scotsman’s log: graduation stirs a memory’, The Scotsman, 3 July 1965. BUCCLEUCH, Anna, Duchess of see SCOTT, Anna Duchess of Buccleuch (1651–1732)

born Pathhead, Fife, 24 March 1877, died Peebles 24 Nov. 1948. Novelist. Daughter of Helen Masterton, and John Buchan, Free Church of Scotland minister.

BUCHAN, Anna Masterton [O. Douglas],

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she might write. Her fiction celebrated the circumscribed comfort of settled, female, middle-class existence, and has, perhaps unjustly, sometimes been tagged with the term ‘Kailyard’. Her mainly female readers, affirmed by this fiction, identified with its values of female self-effacement, competent service to others, endurance and humour. bd

she had prophesied to rise. She is reputedly buried with other Buchanites at Crocketford. White took some followers to America, and the sect died out. Neither the Buchanites nor their leader has been studied in earnest. Elspeth Buchan’s claim to be the biblical ‘sun-clothed’ woman pre-dates the same claim made in 1792 by the better-known Englishwoman, Joanna Southcott (1730–1814), who gave rise to the Southcottian sect. cgb

• Buchan, A. (1950) Farewell to Priorsford, (1954) Unforgettable, Unforgotten. Douglas, O., Works as above and see HSWW (Bibl.) HSWW (Bibl.); Forrester, W. (1995) Anna Buchan and O. Douglas; Green, M. (1990) John Buchan and his Sister Anna; ODNB (2004); Reekie, A. G. (1950) ‘A biographical introduction’, in A. Buchan, Farewell to Priorsford; Tweedsmuir, S. (1950) ‘Anna’, in A. Buchan, Farewell to Priorsford.

• Cameron, J. (1904) History of the Buchanite Delusion 1783–1846; Dictionary of Scottish Church History and Theology (1993) pp. 108–9; ODNB (2004); Towill, E. S. (1976) People and Places in the Story of the Scottish Church, pp. 51–2, 88; Train, J. (1846) The Buchanites from First to Last. BUCHAN, Isobel, Countess of see FIFE, Isobel of, Countess of Buchan (c. 1285–c. 1314)

n. Simpson, baptised near Banff, 6 Feb. 1740, died Closeburn, Dumfriesshire, 29 March 1791. Founder and ‘Friend Mother’ of the Scottish religious sect known as the Buchanites. Daughter of Margaret Gordon, and John Simpson, innkeeper. Elspeth Simpson moved to Glasgow where she met and married on 13 July 1760 a potter, Robert Buchan, and bore him three children, but he reputedly sent her back to Banff where she began to have unusual religious experiences. Returning to Glasgow around 1781, she met a Relief Church minister, Rev. Hugh White of Irvine, to whom she claimed to be ‘the woman clothed with the sun’ (Revelations 12). Hugh White believed her, took himself to be her ‘man-child’ (also in Rev. 12), and a band of followers was set up at Irvine in 1783. In 1784, he was deposed by his presbytery, the group was hounded out, and they settled on a farm near Closeburn in Dumfriesshire. With around 50 followers dressed in uniform green frocks, they adopted a celibate life awaiting the ‘Second Coming’. Their customs were much mocked. Robert Burns is said to have had a female admirer in the band, and he hinted at sexual perversion and lesbianism. He wrote that Elspeth Buchan ‘pretends to give them the Holy Ghost by breathing on them which she does with postures and practices that are scandalously indecent’, and they ‘lye and lodge all together, and hold likewise a community of women, as it is another of their tenets that they can commit no mortal sin’ (Letter to James Burness 1784, quoted in Dictionary, 1993, pp. 108–9). When Elspeth Buchan died, the entire band moved to Larghill Farm and then to Crocketford, where a devoted follower took her body, standing vigil the 50th anniversary night of her death in 1841, when

BUCHAN, Elspeth,

n. Kent, born Glasgow, 3 Apr. 1926, died Brighton, 14 Jan. 2012. MEP, councillor, magistrate, political and cultural campaigner. Daughter of Chrissie Sinclair, domestic servant, and Joseph Kent, shipyard worker and tram driver, staunch members of the Scottish Communist Party (SCP). Janey Kent attended Hyndland Secondary School, Glasgow, leaving at 14 to work as a ­shorthand typist. In 1945, she married Norman Buchan, a fellow member of the Young Communist League (YCL). They had one son. Resigning from the SCP in 1956, after the Soviet invasion of Hungary, they both joined the Labour party. Norman was a Labour MP from 1964 until his death in 1990. Janey became a Strathclyde Region councillor (1974–9), then MEP for Glasgow (1979–94). A lifelong socialist, Janey Buchan was from the start a passionate supporter of radical causes. An early campaigner in the consumer movement, CND and Anti-Apartheid, she welcomed Nelson Mandela when he visited Glasgow. She read and clipped seven newspapers a day, keeping her husband and friends updated on current affairs, while taking a full part in public life. At Strasbourg, although vocal in her criticism of aspects of the European Parliament, she was much respected by fellow MEPs. She later supported the LGBT movement and was life-president of the Scottish Minority Rights Group. As a Glasgow councillor, Janey Buchan represented culture and the arts: she fostered political theatre from the 1950s, and in 1951 helped organise the People’s Festival in Edinburgh, a platform for

BUCHAN, Jane O’Neil (Janey),

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1960–1, UK Delegate to the UN General Assembly. The then Foreign Secretary, Lord Home, later said, ‘the years when she served in the United Nations were difficult and controversial, but she . . . earned the respect of all’ (Scotsman 1978). From 1962 to 1964 she was Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Scotland. Losing her Aberdeen seat in the 1966 general election, she pursued a business career with the Cunard company until, in 1970, she was created life peeress, Baroness Tweedsmuir of Belhelvie, and returned to politics. She then became Minister of State in the Scottish Office, taking particular interest in the fishing industry. Moving to the Foreign Office, again as Minister of State, she led the British negotiating team in Reykjavik during the so-called ‘cod war’ dispute over access to the Icelandic fishing grounds. In 1974, she became the first woman to be appointed Deputy Speaker of the Lords. However, it was as first chair of the Lords’ select committee on European affairs that The Times thought she would be best remembered. The analytical quality of the Committee’s reports on legislative proposals ‘gave other European parliamentarians cause to marvel’ (The Times 1978). Lord Home assessed Lady Tweedsmuir as having ‘a natural authority and a clear, disciplined mind’, while a junior colleague described her as ‘one of the most delightful women in public life, with a breadth of knowledge and incisive understanding’ (Scotsman 1978). tb

the emerging band of traditional singers, and forerunner of the Edinburgh Fringe. Both the Buchans’ energetic promotion of and enthusiasm for folk song and the revival of Scots traditional music was a major and lasting contribution to Scottish life. They gave unlimited hospitality to singers and collectors alike, many of them famous. Janey Buchan had a clear and principled view of life, saying that it was reflected in *Mary Brooksbank’s song: ‘Oh dear me, the warld’s ill-divided/Them that work the hardest are aye wi’ least provided.’ She knew who she liked and trusted, personally or politically, admitting that she was ‘a good hater’, and was highly critical of some in the Labour movement – writing to several people warning them not to come to Norman’s funeral. She did not have a funeral herself, rather left her body to science and her huge collection of books to Scottish universities. MPB • The Herald, 17 Jan. 2012, The Independent, 18 Jan. 2012, The Scotsman, 17 Jan. 2012, (obits). Personal knowledge. BUCHAN, Priscilla Jean Fortescue, Lady Tweedsmuir, n. Thomson, m1 Grant, m2 Buchan, born London 25

Jan. 1915, died Potterton House, Aberdeenshire, 11 March 1978. Politician. Daughter of Edythe Mary Unwin, and Brigadier Alan Fortescue Thomson, DSO. Priscilla Thomson was educated in England, Germany and France. In 1934, she married Major Sir Arthur Lindsay Grant, Grenadier Guards, of Monymusk and had two daughters; he was killed in action in 1944. During the Second World War she carried out welfare work in a munitions factory in Aberdeen that employed large numbers of women. Much later, when she, like many other employees, contracted terminal cancer, her family attributed the cause to the dangerous chemicals to which they had all been exposed. In 1946, a ‘strikingly beautiful’ widow, she won a by-election for the Conservatives in Aberdeen South, becoming, aged 31, the youngest woman to enter the Commons. In 1948, she married John Buchan, 2nd Baron Tweedsmuir, CBE, CD, son of the celebrated author of the same name and nephew of *Anna Buchan. They had a daughter. She sponsored a private member’s bill that became the Protection of Birds Act 1954. The bill, introduced to the Lords by Lord Tweedsmuir, was only the second bill steered through both Houses by a husband and wife. From 1950 to 1953, she was UK representative at the Council of Europe and in

• NLS: Dep. 337, Acc. 9059A and 11884, 11227, 11294, corr. and papers 1930–78, listed NRA 29245; Univ. of Cambridge Library: Dept of Manuscripts, Tweedsmuir of Belhelvie, Priscilla Jean Fortescue, Baroness (1915–78), XII (103), XVII:13 (99, 109, 137, 138, 141, 144, 153). ODNB (2004); The Daily Telegraph, 13 March 1978, The Scotsman, 13 March 1978, The Times, 13 March 1978 (obits); Lord Tweedsmuir (1998) ‘Priscilla Tweedsmuir, 1915–1978’, John Buchan Journal, 18; Ward, P. (2005) Unionism in the United Kingdom, 1918–1974; WWW. Private information: James Douglas-Hamilton (son-in-law).

m. Fleming, born Langholm 8 Oct. 1899, died Sedgemoor, Somerset, 13 June 1985. Civil engineer. Daughter of Marion Vassie, and James Donaldson Buchanan, minister of Langholm Parish. Surrounded by bridges and other local works of Thomas Telford, Dorothy Buchanan’s earliest ambition was to become a civil engineer, although her male relatives were doctors or clergy.

BUCHANAN, Dorothy Donaldson,

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She was educated at Langholm Academy, the Ministers’ Daughters College and the University of Edinburgh (BSc Engineering 1923), then studied with Nobel Laureate Professor Barkla, but was delayed in graduating by illness. Professor Beare recommended her to contractors S. Pearson & Sons, who would not take her until she had experience. Fortunately, (Sir) Ralph Freeman was recruiting staff for his work as consultant to Dorman Long’s on Sydney Harbour Bridge, and appointed Dorothy Buchanan to the design office at £4 a week – the same as the ‘boys’. She worked for a while ‘running out weights of members, panels, girders etc.’, then sought work in the drawing office, to work on the southern approach spans to the bridge. Having gained the necessary experience, she was taken on by Pearsons’ in 1926 and worked on site at the Belfast Waterworks scheme in the Mourne Valley. The site’s geological problems involved the novel technique of using compressed air to de-water silty strata, providing further ­experience. Site work was apparently not a problem, with workers being content to see her as an engineer. She returned to Dorman Long’s drawing office to work on the George V Bridge in Newcastle and the Lambeth Bridge in London. In 1930 she left to marry William H. Dalrymple Fleming, electrical engineer, judging that family and professional roles could not be combined with success. She had successfully sat the exams to become the ICE’s first female chartered engineer (13 Dec. 1927), which she regarded as a high point in her life. In later years she took up rock climbing and painting. ncb

most terrific of his 103 engagements (the occasion when he put a telescope to his blind eye). During the battle, Mary Watson gave birth to her daughter, also Mary. According to local tradition and oral history, Thomas Watson was transferred to HMS Victory under Nelson’s command, and Mary Watson and an infant daughter went with him. At the battle of Trafalgar (21 Oct. 1805) he headed a gun crew while she tended the wounded (their daughter was apparently protected by another Cellardyke man, Malcolm McRuvie). At the height of battle, Nelson was killed. Mary Watson is said to have prepared his body for transport home, possibly with another woman, Mary Sperring. They would have undressed and washed him, cut off his hair, and helped lower him into a leaguer (cask) of brandy. After the war, Thomas Watson used his navy prize money to open a public house in Cellardyke, now 7 Shore Street. Mary Watson had several more children, and outlived her husband by 23 years. IMH • 1851 census, Kilrenny (birthplace record Mary Watson jnr [Mrs Campbell]); Adkins, R. (2004) Trafalgar; Dyke, F. (1930) ‘Baby of the Sea Battle’, Weekly Scotsman, 7 Nov. 1936; East Fife Observer, 9 June 1936 (letter); 16 July 1936 (article); Gourlay, G. (1879) Fisher Life; Watson, H. (1986) Kilrenny and Cellardyke.

n. Johnson, born Lerwick 15 July 1929, died Lerwick 7 July 1994. Poet and broadcaster. Daughter of Barbara Thomason, crofter, and Jeremiah Johnson, seaman. An only child, born in the fishing town of Lerwick, Rhoda Johnson spent two years during the Second World War in the rural parish of Lunnasting. She lived in Lerwick the rest of her life, but the rhythms and discourses of country life had made a deep impression on her. In 1949, she married Dennis Bulter, meteorologist; they had seven children. In 1965, she contributed the first of many Shetland dialect poems to the New Shetlander journal, and became a welcome reciter of them at concerts throughout the islands. Her work was often humorous, but with a sad tinge now and again. These different moods are on display in her collections A Naev foo a Coarn (1976), Shaela (1977), Link-stanes (1980) and Snyivveries (1986). Rhoda Bulter was an accomplished broadcaster on BBC Radio Shetland, always in her native dialect. Her double-act with Mary Blance as ‘Tamar and Beenie’, a pair of cute Shetland women, became popular. Her untimely death inspired grief, and Shetland Folk Society BULTER, Rhoda Jernetta Ann,

• Buchanan, D. D. (1929) ‘Some Modern Bridges: a brief description of their construction’, The Woman Engineer, vol. 2, 20, Sept., pp. 373–5; www.theiet.org/resources/ library/archives/research/wes/WES_Vol_2a.html; New Civil Engineer, 6, July 1978. Communications from Dorman Long.

m. Watson, born Dundee 4 July 1777, died Kilrenny 28 Feb. 1854. Seafarer, nurse. Daughter of Euphame Watson, and Gideon Buik or Buick. In 1797, Mary Buick married widower Thomas Watson (c. 1765–1831), a Cellardyke fisherman. He was pressed into the navy, becoming a gunner and quartermaster, and she contrived to be taken on as a nurse on his ship. In April 1801, they were aboard the 64-gun ship HMS Ardent off Copenhagen, fighting what Vice-Admiral Nelson considered the

BUICK (or BUIK, BUEK), Mary,

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put out a volume of dialect verse, Mindin Rhoda (1995), in her memory. bs

• NRS: JC26/9, ‘Margaret Burges’ bundle, items 1–12. RPC, 2nd Series, vol. 2, p. 494; Survey of Scottish Witchcraft, www.arts.ed.ac.uk/witches.

• Shetland Archives: D1/350 (MSS). Bulter, R., Work as above. Thomason, E. (1994) ‘Poet patriot’, New Shetlander, no. 189 (obit.), (1995) Mindin Rhoda, introduction and biography.

m. Hughes, born Edinburgh 7 July 1888, died Stirling 28 August 1971. Britain’s first qualified woman architect. Daughter of Mary Crudelius, and George Wardlaw Burnet, advocate. Edith Burnet followed her grandfather John Burnet and her uncle Sir J. J. Burnet into the study of architecture. Her grandmother, *Mary Crudelius, had campaigned for women’s higher education. Edith Burnet studied art and architecture 1907–11, in Paris, Dresden and Florence, then at Gray’s School of Art, Aberdeen (Diploma, 1914), working with the head of department, T. Harold Hughes (1887–1947), whom she married in 1918. They had three daughters. With Hughes and A. C. Bryant, her first professional submission was a competition design for Ottawa Government Buildings (1914). She lectured at Gray’s and Robert Gordon’s Technical College 1915–19. After her husband’s demobilisation, they both concentrated on practice. T. H. Hughes worked briefly in the Glasgow office of Burnet, Tait & Lorne, Edith’s uncle’s practice. Edith was apparently refused employment in their London office because the toilet accommodation for ‘ladies’ was inadequate. In 1922, T. H. Hughes became Director of Architectural Studies at Glasgow School of Architecture. Edith passed her final RIBA exam in 1928. The Glasgow-based phase of her career included a mix of public and monumental commissions (in the family tradition) and a number of small, bespoke housing projects in northern Glasgow and Stirlingshire. The latter, sometimes co-designed with her husband, allowed her to develop her interest in ‘labour-saving kitchen design’ (RIBA Journal 1972). In 1926 she lectured on architecture for BBC Scotland. Her marriage was ‘uneasy’ (McKean 1987), but her husband’s influence appears to have been strong: she clearly shared his antipathy to the Modern Movement and respect for classical architecture. Her major works included the 1924 competition design for Coatbridge War Memorial (1926) – a copy of the classical Choragic Monument of Lysicrates, but with open colonnade and no dome, typical of the simplified, low-relief classicism she favoured. Her design for the Glasgow Mercat Cross (erected 1930) again evoked historical sources. She was architect to Lansdowne House School (1951–8); John Watson’s School (1958–68, now SNGMA 1); and St Mary’s

BURNET, Edith Mary Wardlaw,

born c. 1579, died Edinburgh Jan. 1629, indweller of Nether Cramond, Edinburgh. Indicted for witchcraft. Although her exact source of income is unknown, Margaret Burges, an urban-dwelling, lower-middle class woman, was in the thick of community business dealings, using curses and threats to pressure her neighbours to bend to her will. She quarrelled with neighbours about cloth, rent and money-lending. She rented land and had tenants in her own right. Her household employed several servants. Her second husband, John Gillespie, a boatman, ferried coal. She was referred to in documents by the nickname of ‘Lady Dalyell’, a reference to her deceased first husband, John Dalyell, indweller of Cramond. On 3 October 1628, Elspeth Baird, a confessing witch later burnt in Leith, denounced Margaret Burges as a witch. Burges probably also had a neighbourhood witchcraft reputation in Cramond. The counter-suit of slander she brought against her neighbourhood accusers in the Kirk Session of Cramond on 12 October 1628 failed. For some witchcraft suspects, this strategy stalled witchcraft proceedings – but not this time. Ministers found that it was not slander to call Margaret Burges a witch because compelling evidence suggested that she probably was one. Based on testimony from the slander case, the Privy Council granted a commission of justiciary to try her for witchcraft. Throughout a month of investigations, three threads of evidence came to light. Witnesses from Nether Cramond testified that her behaviour (verbal neighbourhood coercion) resulted in misfortunes. Her 13-year-old female servant ‘confest that the said Margaret had kist heir [kissed her] divers tymes beffoir and scho hir lykwayis’ (NRS, JC26/9/1). Investigators then found a devil’s mark on her leg, which confirmed witchcraft. Malefice (evil harm) and demonic relations were common in Scottish witchcraft trials, but allegations of same-sex affection were unusual. Margaret Burges was tried for witchcraft on 27 January 1629, found guilty and sentenced to death. lm

BURGES, Margaret,

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Episcopal Cathedral and Song School (1956–66), all in Edinburgh. The work at St Mary’s included design of the screen, wrought-iron gates, replacement font and cathedral furniture. Having been refused election as Associate of RIBA in 1927, because she was female, in 1968, Edith Hughes became the first woman to be awarded an honorary fellowship of the RIAS. DMW

Sept. 1937; Thomas, G. S. with Richardson, T. (2002) The Garden (RHS Journal), vol. 127, pt 3, March. Personal information (James Burnett of Leys). BURNETT-SMITH, Annie

(1859–1943)

see SWAN, Annie Shepherd

BURNLEY CAMPBELL,‡ Margaret Jane, MBE, n. Hunter, born Victoria, Australia, 28 May 1858, died

• National Monuments Records of Scotland, list of works and biography supplied by Ailsa Tanner (c. 1980); Robert Gordon’s Technical College, Governors’ Minutes, 1914–20. Glendinning, M. et al. (1996) A History of Scottish Architecture; McKean, C. (1987) The Scottish Thirties: an architectural introduction; RIBA Journal, Feb. 1972 (obit.). www.scottisharchitects.org.uk

Ormidale, Argyll, 11 March 1938. Gaelic-language activist. Daughter and only child of Catherine Campbell, landowner, and William Hunter, farmer. Margaret Hunter Campbell married Lt. Col. Hardin Burnley in 1882 and succeeded to her mother’s estate of Ormidale in 1892. As a passionate supporter of the Gaelic language, she was a prominent activist on the Executive of An Comunn Gaidhealach (ACG) for over 30 years. The first woman to be President of ACG, from 1907 to 1909, she successfully convened a grand fundraising bazaar held in Glasgow in 1907, securing a solid financial foundation for the organisation. A Gaelic learner herself, she sought to develop opportunities for adults learning the language and initiated, under the auspices of ACG, residential Gaelic summer schools held in Gaelic-speaking communities, inspired by the Irish example. Always innovative, she recommended more effective methods of language teaching as used in Ireland, and advocated bilingual signage for the Highlands many years before the idea was given any official consideration. On the Arts and Industries Committee of ACG, she strove to develop home industries, insisting that home-workers in the Highlands, predominantly female, should be paid upfront rather than on a ‘sale or return’ basis, and she played a central role in establishing Highland Home Industries as a self-supporting enterprise. As chair of Kilmodan School Board from 1905 to 1918, and from 1919 as a member of Argyll Education Authority, she was a vocal advocate for bilingual education in Highland schools. Her long and dedicated service to ACG was marked in 1933, when it was said that she had been ‘the inspiring and driving force behind much of the work which ACG had been able to accomplish’ (An Gaidheal, 28, p. 133). In 1934 she received an MBE for services to Gaelic culture. PS

BURNETT, Sybil (Isabella) Aird, Lady, n. Smith, born Ladhope, Roxburghshire, 6 Nov. 1889, died Crathes Castle, 6 April 1960. Garden designer. Daughter of Mary Ashe Crozier, and William Smith, grain merchant. Sybil Burnett was one of the most influential and respected gardeners in Great Britain in the 20th century. Few records of her life remain, since most family documents were destroyed by a fire at Crathes in 1966. In her youth, she was a successful hockey player, representing the Borders. On 10 July 1913, she married Major General Sir James L. G. Burnett of Leys, Bart (1880–1953), owner of Crathes Castle, Kincardineshire. They had two sons and a daughter. Sybil Burnett became involved in a considerable amount of voluntary work associated with her husband’s life as a soldier. She wrote ‘The Happy Prisoner’, about her life as chatelaine of Crathes Castle, and poetry in memory of the Gordon Highlanders who died in Singapore. At Crathes she created the now-famous gardens; the Golden Garden was planted later, in the 1970s, with reference to her concept for it. She also ­redesigned the herbaceous borders in the great garden at Pitmedden. Graham Stuart Thomas considered her ‘a very original colour schemer . . . in her central garden she used the soft pinky brown walls as a background . . . She also had the wit, when she made a white garden, to plant a hedge . . . [which] showed up the white flowers’ (Thomas 2002, p. 214). Crathes was given to the NTS in 1952. JB

• An Deo-Gréine (1905–23): http://digital.nls.uk/125056083; An Gaidheal (1923–63): http://digital.nls.uk/124847224; Macdonald, N. and Maclean, C. (eds) (2014) The Great Book of Skye, pp. 33–4; Souvenir and Handbook of Feill a’ Chomuinn Ghaidhealaich: http://digital.nls.uk/76740396; ‘Gaelic in

• Burnett of Leys archive, Crathes: Sybil Burnett papers. The Burnett Banner (2017), 37, www.burnett.uk.com/index_ htm_files/Edition%2037.pdf; Taylor, G. C., Country Life, 25

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promenades’. She was of a slightly later generation than Ranger’s ‘ladies of pleasure’ (1775), who mostly lived in closes off the High Street. Complaints of night-time disturbances at her Rose Street address brought her before the magistrates. The stern Bailie William Creech (1745–1815), Robert Burns’s publisher, sentenced her to banishment from the city, on pain of being drummed through the streets plus six months in a house of correction (the normal punishment for prostitution). She appealed, successfully obtaining a bill of suspension, after one witness withdrew his testimony. William Creech became the butt of a mischievous report in a London journal that he was to marry her, followed by an even more equivocal denial. The poet Robert Burns (they were not related) followed her case and wrote of it: ‘Cease ye prudes your envious railing/ Lovely Burns has charms – confess./True it is she had one failing/Had a woman ever less?’ (ibid., p. 400). She lived in ‘unenviable notoriety’ before going into a ‘decline’ (ibid.), presumably related to her profession, and retired to Roslin, dying in 1792, still only in her early 20s. She was buried in Rosslyn Chapel graveyard. sr

schools’, The Scotsman, 1 Sept. 1923; Scott, P. (2013) ‘“With heart and voice ever devoted to the cause”: women in the Gaelic movement, 1886–1914’, PhD, Univ. of Edinburgh; ‘Mrs Burnley Campbell at Fort William’, Oban Times, 2 Jan. 1909. BURNS, Elizabeth,‡ born Wisbech

14 Dec. 1957, died Lancaster 20 Aug. 2015. Poet and writer. Daughter of Muriel Hayward, radiographer, and David Grieve Burns, food scientist and descendant of Robert Burns’ uncle. Educated in Edinburgh from the age of eight, Elizabeth Burns graduated from St Andrews University in English and History in 1980. She worked in Stramullion publishing cooperative and Edinburgh’s 1st May Bookshop until 1987. Her first collection, Ophelia and other poems (1991), shortlisted for the 1991 Saltire First Book of the Year, revealed a sustained vision for ‘women’s ways of seeing and writing’ in the face of ‘the mainly male domain of Scottish poetry’ (O’Rourke 2004, p. 40). After moving to Lancaster in 1995 to raise two daughters with her partner Alan Rice, whom she married in 2002, she became a highly regarded writing tutor at two universities and in the community. She joined the Society of Friends in her last years. In four further collections and numerous pamphlets, she created a radical and significant body of work for a different way of being-in-the-world, uncovering the overlooked, sensuous and alert to delicate nuance. A publicity-shy author, her books nevertheless sold out; her many prizes included the inaugural Michael Marks Award 2009 with The Shortest Days, and several shortlistings for Clay (2015). JCR

• Kay, J. (1877 edn.) A Series of Original Portraits and Caricature Etchings, vol. 2, pp. 399–401; Leneman, L. (1995) ‘ “Bad housekeeping” in eighteenth-century Edinburgh’, Scottish Local History, 33, Feb., pp. 8–10; ODNB (2004) (Creech, William); Ranger’s List of Ladies of Pleasure in Edinburgh (1775, rev. edn. 1978).

born Aberdeen 7 Feb. 1819, died Aberdeen 19 March 1909. Educational and social reformer. Daughter of Elizabeth Paton, and Lieutenant William Kinninmont Burton. Educated by her mother, who imbued her with admiration for the ideas of Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Mary Wollstonecraft, Mary Burton moved to Edinburgh in 1832 with her widowed mother and brother, John Hill Burton, historian and advocate. She never married, but combined a lifetime’s work ‘on behalf of women’ (Tooley 1896, p. 164) with raising orphaned nephews and nieces ‘to see that they were trained alike on the intellectual and ­practical side of life’ (The Scotsman, 22 March 1909). This philosophy underpinned her contribution to education. In 1869 she persuaded the directors of the Watt Institution and School of Arts, the first Mechanics Institute and forerunner of Heriot-Watt University, to open its classes to female students. Her niece, Ella Burton, daughter of John Hill Burton and sister of *Mary Rose Burton, was one of the first to enrol. In 1874,

BURTON, Mary,

• Burns, E., Works as above and (1999) The Gift of Light, (2007) The Lantern Bearers, (2010) Held, (2016) Lightkeepers. The Herald, 28 Aug. 2015 (obit.); O’ Rourke, D. (ed.) (2004) Dream State: the new Scottish poets; Schneider, M. (2016) ‘An exceptional poet, Elizabeth Burns’, Artemis Poetry 16, pp. 25–7. BURNS, Margaret, (aka Matthews),

born Durham c. 1769, died Roslin, near Edinburgh, c. 1792. ‘Celebrated beauty’ (Kay 1877, p. 399), prostitute. Margaret Burns’s father is thought to have been a wealthy merchant whose second marriage left her and her sisters unprovided for. She resorted to prostitution for the rest of her short life. Arriving in Edinburgh in 1789, aged about 20, she quickly attracted attention at the ‘evening 64

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Mary Burton became the first woman director. When the Institution became Heriot-Watt College in 1885, she became a life governor. (Heriot-Watt University now has a Mary Burton Centre.) In 1884 she was elected to St Cuthbert’s Parochial Board, later Edinburgh Parish Council, and in 1885 to the Edinburgh School Board, serving on both until 1897. A leading member of the EWLA, she was a speaker and campaigner for women’s suffrage and Irish Home Rule. Mary Burton argued that boys as well as girls should be taught to sew, knit and cook. She also urged that universities should open in the evening to admit working people, and for that reason insisted that the School Board met in the evenings. Her lifelong commitment to equality was reflected in her will. She left legacies for prizes for Heriot-Watt College evening class students ‘irrespective of age or sex’, and to the ENSWS to campaign ‘for the admission of women to sit as members of parliament, either at Westminster or in a Scottish Parliament’ (Edinburgh Evening News, 23 March 1909). Mary Burton’s great-niece, Mary Elizabeth Burton (1865–1944), attended evening classes at Heriot-Watt College and became Scotland’s first female head gardener in 1897. In a thirty-eight-year career at Mavisbank, she encouraged acceptance of women gardeners in the early 20th century. An authority on the cultivation of potatoes, she was prominent within the Scottish Horticultural Association, becoming its first woman president (1920). She was honoured by the Royal Horticultural Society and was the first female recipient of the Neill Medal, awarded by the Royal Caledonian Horticultural Society for outstanding service to horticulture in Scotland. AEJ/DR

Burton, Miss M. E. (for list of her Works see Reid, D., ‘Unsung heroines of horticulture: Scottish gardening women, 1800–1930’, unpublished PhD thesis, University of Edinburgh, 2015). Comfort, C. ‘Some Scottish horticulturists’, The Scottish Gardener and Northern Forester, 7 Nov. 1908, p. 697; Reid, D. (2014) ‘Mary Elizabeth Burton: a horticultural pioneer’, The Caledonian Gardener 2014 Journal of the Royal Caledonian Horticultural Society, pp. 80-3. BURTON Mary Rose Hill, born Edinburgh 20 August 1857, died Rome 5 June 1900. Artist. Daughter of Katherine Innes, and John Hill Burton, historian. The Burton women made a formidable dynasty. Mary Rose Burton’s mother, Katherine Innes (1829–98), had studied sculpture but abandoned her studies to serve with Florence Nightingale in the Crimea. Upon her return, she married John Hill Burton (3 August 1855) and became a close friend of her sister-in-law and fellow activist *Mary Burton. Katherine Burton was active in the ELEA, and wrote a memoir of its founder *Mary Crudelius. Mary Rose Burton studied mathematics and Latin in the early 1880s with the Edinburgh Association for the University Education of Women, then art in Munich and Paris. She exhibited with the RA, the RSA, and the SSA, among others, and was a founding member of the Edinburgh Lady Artists’ Club, formed in 1889 for the benefit of professional, practising artists. Some of her most interesting paintings were based on travels to Japan (two solo exhibitions in London 1895 and 1896) and to Ireland with her friend and fellow artist Florence Haig (1855–1952). An intimate friend of Patrick and *Anna Geddes, Mary Rose Burton painted some of the murals for their Ramsay Garden home and for University Hall. The Ramsay Garden murals depicted her grandmother’s home, Kilravock Castle, and suggest her love for the north of Scotland: she and her mother actively campaigned to save the Falls of Foyers, near Inverness, from destruction by British Aluminium, but to her great sadness she managed to preserve them only in her drawings and paintings (Helland 1997, p. 127). Like her aunt and her mother, Mary Rose Burton was concerned for the education of women and for women’s right to follow a career. She died suddenly during a visit to Italy. jvh

• Heriot-Watt Univ. Archive: SA1/2/2 Minutes of Directors, Watt Institution and School of Arts, 1869–85; HWC1/1-2 Minutes of Governors of George Heriot’s Trust, HeriotWatt College Cttee., 2 April 1909 (obit.); City of Edinburgh Central Library: YL 353 Minutes of Edinburgh School Board, 1885–97; Edinburgh City Archive: SL/10 Minutes of St Cuthbert’s Parochial Board, 17 July 1889. Edinburgh Evening News, 20–4 March 1885, 28 March–1 April 1891, 22–3 March 1909 (obit., legacy); Jones, A. (2000) ‘Rescued from oblivion? the case of Mary Burton and Liberton Bank House’, Scottish Archives, vol. 6; *ODNB (2004); Tooley, S. A. (1896) ‘A slum landlady: an interview with Miss Hill Burton’, The Young Woman, vol. IV, p. 164; Tooley, S. A. ‘Notable Victorians’, Weekly Scotsman, 20 Feb. 1932; The Scotsman, 22 March 1909 (obit.). Heriot-Watt Univ. Archive: Heriot-Watt College Calendar 1889–90, Appendix pp. 4 and 135.

• NLS: Acc. 9557, 10526, 10577, corr.; Strathclyde Univ. Archives, T-GED 9/82 and 1991, corr. Burton, M. R. H. (1898) ‘Photography and colour-printing in Japan’, Studio, September.

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in 1818, married Rev. Edward John Bury, 15 years her junior, causing disputes with her children. He died in 1832, leaving her with two more daughters. Lady Charlotte wrote chiefly to support her precarious finances. Her early Poems on Several Occasions (1797) reflect both fashionable forms and cosmopolitanism, including sentimental references to the ‘lonely cott’ of the Scots. The Three Great Sanctuaries of Tuscany (1832), in memory of John Bury and illustrated by his engravings, is a poem on medieval monasteries. Primarily, however, she wrote popular novels, the first in 1812, the rest following her second marriage. Her 19 books, produced in 16 years, sold well, pandering to the desire for romantic novels about high society and earning her up to £200 each. Her most successful publication was the Diary Illustrative of the Times of George IV, scandalously gossipy insights into court life (Anon. 1838, repr. 1896, 1908 under Bury). Because of the change in tastes, her fiction was little read after her death, but has now attracted renewed attention. dls

Burton, K. (1874) A Memoir of Cosmo Innes, (1879) A Memoir of Mrs Crudelius; Helland, J. (1997) ‘Artistic advocate: Mary Rose Hill Burton and the Falls of Foyers’, Scot. Econ. and Soc. Hist., 17, 2, (2000) Professional Women Painters in NineteenthCentury Scotland. BURY, Lady Charlotte Susan Maria, n. Campbell, m1 Campbell, m2 Bury, born Argyll House, London, 28

Jan. 1775, died London 31 March 1861. Poet, diarist, popular novelist. Daughter of *Elizabeth Gunning, and John Campbell, 5th Duke of Argyll. Lady Charlotte Campbell spent much of her privileged upbringing on the Continent, gaining a broad knowledge of art, literature and music. She was presented at court in 1790 and later hosted literary parties in Edinburgh, introducing Walter Scott to Matthew Lewis, author of The Monk, to whom she was ‘Divinity’. In 1796, she married her impecunious cousin, Colonel Jack Campbell, whose death in 1809 left her with nine children to support. Appointed lady-in-waiting to Princess Caroline in 1810, she left in 1815 with no further contact, except as a defence witness during the ‘trial’ of Caroline, for adultery, in 1820. Despite her political potential, she believed that women did not have ‘the strength and terseness ascribed to male intellect alone’. She travelled frequently and,

• Bury, Lady C., Works as above and see Bibl. DBAWW; HSWW (Bibl.); ODNB (2004); Perkins, P. (2001) ‘Bury, Lady Charlotte Susan Maria Campbell, 1775–1861, a critical essay’, Scottish Women Poets of the Romantic Period, electronic anthology www.alexanderstreet2.com

C CADDELL, Christian see CALDWELL, Christian

small voice within’ which said: ‘Be still and know that I am God’ (Caddy 2002, p. 33), and in time she came to accept its guidance. In March 1957, the couple, their three sons and their friend Dorothy Maclean moved to Forres in Morayshire to manage the Cluny Hill Hotel. Five years later, after an interval running a hotel in Perthshire, they all moved to a caravan park near Findhorn, Morayshire. The organic garden they planted there, attributing its spectacular results to the help of plant spirits, attracted national ­attention. The three of them began what became the Findhorn Foundation, a residential community founded on the founders’ spiritual beliefs and practices. The divine briefings received by Eileen Caddy, and the disciplined approach of Peter Caddy, gave direction to the nature and work of the Community which grew and flourished, attracting residents and visitors from around

(  f l. 1660s)

CADDY, Eileen Marion,‡ n. Jessop, m1 Combe, m2 Caddy, MBE, born Alexandria, Egypt 26 Aug. 1917,

died Findhorn 13 Dec. 2006. Co-founder of the Findhorn Foundation. Daughter of Muriel Bull, and Albert Jessop, Director of Barclays Bank DCO in Alexandria. The second child of four, six-year-old Eileen Jessop was sent to Ireland for school, and later attended a domestic college. She married RAF officer Squadron Leader Andrew Combe and had five children, but in 1953 she met and fell in love with Peter Caddy (1917–94) while she and her husband were posted in Iraq. When she asked Andrew for a divorce, she lost access to the children until the late 1960s. Distressed, she visited a Glastonbury private sanctuary with Peter Caddy, where, while meditating, she first heard ‘the still

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in 1818, married Rev. Edward John Bury, 15 years her junior, causing disputes with her children. He died in 1832, leaving her with two more daughters. Lady Charlotte wrote chiefly to support her precarious finances. Her early Poems on Several Occasions (1797) reflect both fashionable forms and cosmopolitanism, including sentimental references to the ‘lonely cott’ of the Scots. The Three Great Sanctuaries of Tuscany (1832), in memory of John Bury and illustrated by his engravings, is a poem on medieval monasteries. Primarily, however, she wrote popular novels, the first in 1812, the rest following her second marriage. Her 19 books, produced in 16 years, sold well, pandering to the desire for romantic novels about high society and earning her up to £200 each. Her most successful publication was the Diary Illustrative of the Times of George IV, scandalously gossipy insights into court life (Anon. 1838, repr. 1896, 1908 under Bury). Because of the change in tastes, her fiction was little read after her death, but has now attracted renewed attention. dls

Burton, K. (1874) A Memoir of Cosmo Innes, (1879) A Memoir of Mrs Crudelius; Helland, J. (1997) ‘Artistic advocate: Mary Rose Hill Burton and the Falls of Foyers’, Scot. Econ. and Soc. Hist., 17, 2, (2000) Professional Women Painters in NineteenthCentury Scotland. BURY, Lady Charlotte Susan Maria, n. Campbell, m1 Campbell, m2 Bury, born Argyll House, London, 28

Jan. 1775, died London 31 March 1861. Poet, diarist, popular novelist. Daughter of *Elizabeth Gunning, and John Campbell, 5th Duke of Argyll. Lady Charlotte Campbell spent much of her privileged upbringing on the Continent, gaining a broad knowledge of art, literature and music. She was presented at court in 1790 and later hosted literary parties in Edinburgh, introducing Walter Scott to Matthew Lewis, author of The Monk, to whom she was ‘Divinity’. In 1796, she married her impecunious cousin, Colonel Jack Campbell, whose death in 1809 left her with nine children to support. Appointed lady-in-waiting to Princess Caroline in 1810, she left in 1815 with no further contact, except as a defence witness during the ‘trial’ of Caroline, for adultery, in 1820. Despite her political potential, she believed that women did not have ‘the strength and terseness ascribed to male intellect alone’. She travelled frequently and,

• Bury, Lady C., Works as above and see Bibl. DBAWW; HSWW (Bibl.); ODNB (2004); Perkins, P. (2001) ‘Bury, Lady Charlotte Susan Maria Campbell, 1775–1861, a critical essay’, Scottish Women Poets of the Romantic Period, electronic anthology www.alexanderstreet2.com

C CADDELL, Christian see CALDWELL, Christian

small voice within’ which said: ‘Be still and know that I am God’ (Caddy 2002, p. 33), and in time she came to accept its guidance. In March 1957, the couple, their three sons and their friend Dorothy Maclean moved to Forres in Morayshire to manage the Cluny Hill Hotel. Five years later, after an interval running a hotel in Perthshire, they all moved to a caravan park near Findhorn, Morayshire. The organic garden they planted there, attributing its spectacular results to the help of plant spirits, attracted national ­attention. The three of them began what became the Findhorn Foundation, a residential community founded on the founders’ spiritual beliefs and practices. The divine briefings received by Eileen Caddy, and the disciplined approach of Peter Caddy, gave direction to the nature and work of the Community which grew and flourished, attracting residents and visitors from around

(  f l. 1660s)

CADDY, Eileen Marion,‡ n. Jessop, m1 Combe, m2 Caddy, MBE, born Alexandria, Egypt 26 Aug. 1917,

died Findhorn 13 Dec. 2006. Co-founder of the Findhorn Foundation. Daughter of Muriel Bull, and Albert Jessop, Director of Barclays Bank DCO in Alexandria. The second child of four, six-year-old Eileen Jessop was sent to Ireland for school, and later attended a domestic college. She married RAF officer Squadron Leader Andrew Combe and had five children, but in 1953 she met and fell in love with Peter Caddy (1917–94) while she and her husband were posted in Iraq. When she asked Andrew for a divorce, she lost access to the children until the late 1960s. Distressed, she visited a Glastonbury private sanctuary with Peter Caddy, where, while meditating, she first heard ‘the still

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the world. In 1975, to house a college, the Community bought Cluny Hill Hotel; in 1983 they purchased the Findhorn Bay caravan park. By 1979, the Community numbered 300 and is still flourishing. Eileen Caddy stopped receiving guidance for the Community in 1971, Dorothy Maclean left in 1973 and Peter Caddy in 1978. Eileen Caddy travelled worldwide in the 1980s, speaking at spiritual gatherings. She wrote several books, one of which, Opening Doors Within (1986), was translated into 30 languages. In 2004 she was awarded an MBE for service to spiritual inquiry. She lived in the Findhorn Community until her death. A respected, much-loved mentor to the Community, she requested her death ‘be a celebration’, not ‘a time of mourning.’ (Ibid., p. 252).FAH

on ­buildings (1913–14) she was one of the medical advisers to women hunger strikers in prison, who were frequently released to her care under the Cat and Mouse Act. Another such was Mabel Jones (c. 1865–1923), a Glasgow-based doctor, who wrote damning reports of prison conditions. Grace Cadell notably treated *Ethel Moorhead after forcible feeding had led to double pneumonia. Her house was known as a place of refuge for suffragettes. She apparently adopted four children, probably on the outbreak of war (AGC, p. 256), but died in 1918. rd • AGC; HHGW; Lawrence, M. (1971) Shadow of Swords; The Times, 12 Oct. 1912; BMJ, 9 March 1918 (obit.). CAIRD, Alice Mona, n. Alison, [G. Noel Hatton], born Ryde, Isle of Wight, 24 May 1854, died London 4 Feb. 1932. Novelist, essayist and campaigner. Daughter of Matilda Ann Jane Hector, and John Alison, engineer. Mona Caird, whose father was a Scot, said that her conventional upbringing led her to grow up rebelling against traditional attitudes and that she was discouraged as a young writer (Women’s Penny Paper 1890, p. 421). At 23, she married James Alexander Henryson Caird (1847–1921), son of agriculturalist and MP, Sir James Caird. Although she spent much of her adult life either in London or on the continent, she frequently stayed at Cassencary, the Caird family estate in Galloway, using the area as settings for some of her fiction. She had one son, Alister James Caird. Mona Caird’s first two novels, Whom Nature Leadeth (1883) and One That Wins (1887), were published under the pseudonym ‘G. Noel Hatton’; both express unformed yet powerful views on women’s rights as individuals. (It has been claimed that Lady Hetty (1875) is her work [Sutherland 1988, p. 99] but that is unlikely.) She acquired notoriety following an 1888 Westminster Review essay, ‘Marriage’, in which she argued that marriage made women little better than legally bound slaves. The Daily Telegraph responded under the heading ‘Is Marriage a Failure?’, bringing a flood of over 27,000 letters. The debate raged and she was ‘banned and shunned like the plague in certain circles’ (Swan 1934, p. 71). However, Mona Caird was claimed as a champion by women’s rights groups, a position supported by the dozens of essays she published before the First World War and her prominent membership in the advanced Pioneer Club.

• Caddy, E. Works as above, and (1970) God Spoke to Me, (2002) with L. Hollingshead, Flight into Freedom and Beyond [autobiography] (Bibl.). Platts, D. E. (1999) Divinely Ordinary, Divinely Human: celebrating the life and work of Eileen Caddy.

born Carriden 25 Oct. 1855, died Mosspark, Muckhart 19 Feb. 1918. Physician and suffragist. Daughter of Martha Fleming, and George Philip Cadell, coalwork superintendent. Grace Cadell was one of *Sophia Jex-Blake’s first students in the Edinburgh School of Medicine for Women in 1887, but in 1888 was dismissed, along with her younger sister, Georgina, for challenging Jex-Blake’s authority. (They brought a partly successful action for damages, heard in 1889.) *Elsie Inglis joined the rebels, and set up an alternative Medical College for Women, in which the Cadell sisters enrolled. When Dr Inglis founded the Medical Women’s Club in 1899, Grace Cadell was appointed to the Medical Committee, and in 1904 she also joined the staff of Elsie Inglis’s High Street centre, the Hospice, specialising in gynaecology. She was running it in 1911. She later became Registrar at London’s New Hospital for Women. An active suffragette, Grace Cadell was president of the Leith Branch of the WSPU in 1907, before aligning herself with the WFL. In 1912, in protest against the withholding of the franchise, she refused to pay taxes, and her furniture was seized and sold under warrant at the Mercat Cross, Edinburgh. Renowned for her tenacity and commitment, her response was to rally her friends and turn the occasion into a suffrage meeting. During the Scottish campaign of attacks

CADELL, Grace Ross,

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Her most famous work, The Daughters of Danaus (1894), describes a gifted composer who struggles to develop her art in the face of domestic demands. The Great Wave (1931), published the year before her death, addresses the tragedy of domination and power, themes that as a staunch pacifist she used throughout her career but that gained particular significance for her during the inter-war period. She also passionately supported anti-vivisection causes and the suffrage movement, although as a pacifist she refused to participate in militant action. Her later years were marked by illness, though the writer Ernest Rhys described her as a woman who, even in suffering, ‘defied the omens with superb courage, wit, and gaiety’ (Rhys 1940, p. 217). tsr

Janet Caird’s most important contribution is considered by many to be three books of poetry written and published in later life. Some Walk a Narrow Path (1977), A Distant Urn (1983) and John Donne, You Were Wrong (1988) contain short, acutely observed poems, formally influenced by the Imagism which was still influential when she was a student. The poems speak from a woman’s perspective of the process and loneliness of ageing. She was an able critic who wrote reviews and articles, especially on women writers, for Scottish journals including Cencrastus, Chapman and Scottish Literary Journal. Her interests extended to ­archaeology, art and travel. She was a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland and President of the Inverness Association of University Women. mpm

• Caird, M., Works as above, and (1889) The Wing of Azrael, (1891) A Romance of the Moors, (1897) The Morality of Marriage and Other Essays on the Status and Destiny of Woman, (1898) The Pathway of the Gods, (1915) The Stones of Sacrifice. Guilette, M. (1989) Afterword to The Daughters of Danaus; Heilmann, A. (1996) ‘Mona Caird (1854–1932): wild woman, new woman, and early radical feminist critic of marriage and motherhood’, Wom. Hist. Rev., 5,1; ODNB (2004); Rhys, E. (1940) Wales England Wed; Swan, A. S. (1934) My Life ; Sutherland, J. (1988) The Longman Companion to Victorian Fiction; Women’s Penny Paper, 1890.

• NLS: Acc. 9670, 9652, 12294, James and Janet Caird Archive. Caird, J., Works as above and (1961) Murder Reflected, (1966) Perturbing Spirit, (1967) Murder Scholastic, (1968) The Loch, (1973) Murder Remote. Contemporary Authors Online, Gale Publishing Co. www. gale-edit.com/cas/; Scotlit, No. 7, Spring, 1992; Scottish Poetry Library Newsletter No. 19, August 1992; The Scotsman, 22 Jan. 1992 (obit.). Private information: Dr Elisabeth Davenport (daughter). CAIRNS, Elizabeth, born Blackford, Perthshire, 1685, died Leith 4 April 1741. Writer of spiritual memoirs. Elizabeth Cairns was an exceptionally pious and committed Presbyterian from youth. A shepherd for her family until she was 16, her isolation fostered introspection and religious visions. In her early 20s she moved to Stirling. She spent time in service, then became a schoolmistress. When her early spiritual writings were copied and circulated without her permission in the early 1730s, she made her original manuscript available, adding further memoirs, until her sudden death. Visiting friends in Edinburgh in 1741, she fell ill and died at Leith. Her memoirs were published posthumously. Illuminating her spiritual life, they also offer a rare glimpse into a rural young woman’s life. Her contemporary, Elisabeth West (c. 1680–after 1709), a domestic servant in and around Edinburgh, including in *Grisell Baillie’s household, wrote a similar work. A radical Presbyterian, she condemned the 1707 Union on religious grounds. Her spiritual diary, 1694–1709, was widely read during eighteenth-century ­religious revivals. EE

n. Kirkwood, born Livingstonia, Malawi, 24 April 1913, died Inverness 20 Jan. 1992. Poet, novelist and critic. Daughter of Janet Gilmour, and Peter Scott Kirkwood, ­missionary. Janet Kirkwood was educated at Dollar Academy and studied English Literature at the University of Edinburgh. She was awarded a scholarship to study at Grenoble University and the Sorbonne, Paris 1935–6. On 19 July 1938 she married James Bowman Caird, a fellow student. They had two daughters. She taught in Park School in Glasgow in the late 1930s and at Dollar Academy during the war. After 1945 she worked at home on drafts of her novels and short stories, some of which were broadcast on radio. She returned to teaching at Dollar Academy in the 1950s. After moving to Inverness in 1963, she pursued her writing ambitions, with strong critical support from her husband, himself a writer and authority on Scottish literature. Her novel for children, Angus the Tartan Partan (1961), was followed by a series of adult detective novels and the historical novel The Umbrella Maker’s Daughter (1980), set in Dollar. CAIRD, Janet Hinshaw,

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left for the USA and founded a school in Boston. In 1838 Fanny married the Spanish diplomat Angel Calderón de la Barca (1790–1861). Shortly after their marriage they moved to Mexico where he was appointed Ambassador of Spain. Fanny Calderón de la Barca’s letters, based on her journals and compiled as Life in Mexico (1843), are considered among the most important documents on 19th-century Mexico. She also wrote The Attaché in Madrid, or, Sketches of the Court of Isabella II (1856), published anonymously. Her letters show her wit, curiosity and exuberant love of life. When violent events happen around her, her descriptions are ironic or humorous, never fearful. Life in Mexico first appeared in Boston and Mexico. A large volume of over 500 pages, with a preface by the historian William H. Prescott, it was reviewed in the Edinburgh Review and North American Review, which commented: ‘In the brilliant gallery of pictures, which our fair author has sketched, sometimes of the city and its inhabitants, . . . at others of its beautiful environs, we know not which to select’ (January 1843). Life in Mexico was considered to be accurate enough for use as a guide by American officers during the Mexican War of 1847. Fanny Calderón de la Barca witnessed the day-to-day complexity of Mexican life as well as two small uprisings, the copper monetary crisis and a change of president. The most interesting aspect of Life in Mexico is her account of the private world of Mexican women, including her privileged access to Catholic nuns. Her descriptions of young girls being given as brides to the church are harrowing and critical. The Calderón de la Barcas later lived in Washington, but in 1853 political changes in Spain compelled Don Angel to return to Madrid as Minister of Foreign Affairs. In 1861 he died and Fanny went to live in a convent just over the French border. She later accepted a request from Queen Isabella to undertake the education of the young Infanta Isabella. In 1876, she was made a marquesa in her own right and spent the remainder of her life with the royal family in Madrid. jc

• Cairns, E. (1762) Memoirs of the Life of Elizabeth Cairns; West, E. (1724) Memoirs, or Spiritual Exercises of Elisabeth West. ODNB (2004) (Elisabeth West). CALDER, Muriel, m. Campbell, born Calder (Cawdor) 13 Feb. 1498, died Calder 1570s. Heiress, progenitor of the Campbells of Cawdor. Daughter of Isabel Rose of Kilravock, and John Calder, son of William, last Thane of Calder, d. 1503. John Calder had predeceased his father, leaving one child, red-haired Muriel. Her uncle, Hugh Rose, intended to marry her to his grandson, but the Kilravocks got into hot water feuding with the Urquharts of Cromarty. The Campbell Earl of Argyll, Justice General of Scotland, offered leniency on condition that he acquired wardship of Muriel Calder, with the right to marry her to one of his own kinsmen. There have been many retellings of what happened next: how Argyll’s emissary, Campbell of Inverliver, sent up the Great Glen to fetch her in 1505, was set upon by enraged Calders and Roses in Strath Nairn, how he stripped his ­seven-year-old trophy of her clothes, and put these on a haystack in a cart as a decoy, around which four of his own sons perished in furious fighting. When his wisdom was questioned, sacrificing his sons for a ‘wee lass who might die next winter’, Inverliver is said to have riposted that she would never die ‘so long as there’s a red-haired lassie by the banks of Loch Awe’ (Calder 2003, p. 84). Muriel Calder didn’t die. Married in 1510 to Sir John Campbell, son of the Earl of Argyll, she bore him children, including *Katherine Campbell, later Countess of Crawford. Sir John established the Campbells of Calder as a powerful satellite clan, responsible for ousting the Macdonalds from Islay in 1619. Muriel Calder lived in Calder to a ripe old age, but died before Shakespeare’s influence transformed the place to Cawdor. alrc

• Calder, A. (2003) Gods, Mongrels and Demons; Macphail, J. R. N. (ed.) (1914) Highland Papers, vol. 1; Spalding Club (1859) Book of the Thanes of Cawdor . . . 1236–1742.

• Calderón de la Barca, F. [1843] (1966, 1982, H. T. Fisher and M. H. Fisher, eds) Life in Mexico, (1856) The Attaché in Madrid. Cabañas, M. A. (2008) Nineteenth-Century Travel Narratives; Leask, N. (1999) ‘“The Ghost of Chapultepec”: Fanny Calderón de la Barca, William Prescott and nineteenthcentury Mexican travel’, in J. Elsner and J.-P. Rubiés (eds) Voyages and Visions; North American Review (Jan. 1843), 56,

CALDERÓN DE LA BARCA, Frances Erskine (Fanny), Marquesa, n. Inglis, born Edinburgh 23 Dec.

1804, died Madrid, Spain, 6 Feb. 1882. Author and teacher. Daughter of Jane Stein, schoolteacher, and William Inglis, landowner and Writer to the Signet. Fanny Inglis was brought up in Edinburgh. In 1828, her father’s bankruptcy forced the family to move to Normandy. After his death in 1830 they 69

CALDERWOOD p. 118; ODNB (2004); Rodenas, A. M. (2013) Transatlantic Travels in Nineteenth-Century Latin America: European women pilgrims.

CALDWELL (CALDALL, CADDELL), Christian [John Dicksone], fl. 1660s. Indicted as a cross-dressing

witch finder. On 5 March 1662, Christian Caldwell, while disguised as John Dicksone, burgess of Forfar, initialled a contract with the shire of Moray. The contract stipulated that John Dicksone reside in the shire for one year to identify and examine suspected witches for the devil’s mark. At least eight other men of this profession are known. The salary of six shillings a day was augmented by six pounds for each person John Dicksone identified who was found guilty of witchcraft. What transpired next is unknown, but Christian Caldwell was interrogated in Edinburgh on 30 August 1662 to answer charges of false accusation, torture, and causing the death of innocent people in Moray. An undated indictment also charged that she ‘did counterfoot [her] sex [and] tock on the habit of a man’ (NRS, JC26/28/1). She was imprisoned and in 1663 transported to Barbados. lm

n. Steuart, born 1715, died 1774. Diarist. Daughter of Anne Dalrymple, and Sir James Stewart of Coltness. Margaret Steuart was the eldest daughter in the family. Her father was Solicitor-General for Scotland (1714–17) and through her mother she was connected with the famous legal family of Viscount Stair. Her brother was Sir James Steuart, a notable political economist whose supposed Jacobite connections forced him to live in exile in Europe for many years following the ’45 Rising. She married Thomas Calderwood (d. c. 1773) of Polton, an estate near Edinburgh, in 1735. They had a daughter and two sons and for many years she lived an unremarkable domestic life, her financial abilities manifest in the management of the family estates. Anxiety arising from her brother’s continued exile abroad caused her, with her husband, sons and two servants, to travel through England and on to the Low Countries to pay him a visit, joining him in Brussels in 1756. She recorded her experience in a journal in the form of a series of letters home. It was widely circulated among family and friends and later published. The impression it gives, as a later editor commented, is of ‘a dominating personality, a delightful companion, and an extremely capable woman’ (Fyfe 1942, p. 83). She was not impressed by much of what she saw: anti-English, anti-Catholic and highly critical of continental manners and customs, she pitied everyone who was not born a Scot. In London, she was distinctly unimpressed by government ministers, describing them as: ‘a parcel of old, ignorant, senseless bodies, who mind nothing but eating and drinking, and rolling about in Hyde Park’ (SHA, p. 45). On her return, she resumed her management of the family estates and never ventured out of Scotland again. She wrote an unpublished novel, The Adventures of Fanny Roberts. Her brother was eventually pardoned and returned to Scotland. sn

CALDERWOOD, Margaret, of Polton,

• NRS: JC26/28/1–4. Larner, C. (1981) Enemies of God: the witch-hunt in Scotland; MacDonald, S. W. (1997) ‘The devil’s mark and the witchprickers of Scotland’, Jour. Roy. Soc. Med., 90. Private Information. CALLCOTT, Maria, Lady see GRAHAM, Maria

­(1785–1842)

CAMERON, Elizabeth Jane [Jane Duncan, Janet Sandison], born Renton, Dunbartonshire, 10

March 1910, died Jemimaville 20 Oct. 1976. Novelist. Daughter of Jessie (Janet) Sandison, and Duncan Cameron, policeman. Elizabeth Jane Cameron was brought up in industrial central Scotland, but spent idyllic childhood holidays at The Colony, her grandparents’ croft in the Black Isle, Ross-shire. Her mother died when she was 10 years old, and The Colony, where her baby brother was brought up, became a place of escape from her stepmother. She came to regard it as her real home and it appears in her fiction as ‘Reachfar’. She was educated at Lenzie Academy and graduated MA from the University of Glasgow in 1930. After various secretarial jobs she served in the WRAF, 1939–45. In 1945 she met Alexander (Sandy) Clapperton (1910–58), an engineer, who was unhappily married, and three years later she went with him to Jamaica as his wife, though their partnership was never regularised. She had been writing in secret, though destroying her work, for

• Calderwood, M. [1756] (1884) Letters and journals . . . from England, Holland and the low countries, in 1756, A. Ferguson, ed. DNB vol. III (1908); Fyfe, J. G. (ed.) (1942) Scottish Diaries and Memoirs, 1746–1843; Glover, K. (2011) Elite Women and Polite Society in Eighteenth-Century Scotland; ODNB (2004); SHA.

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many years, and began to write seriously in 1956, after Sandy had been diagnosed with heart disease. In some 15 months she wrote seven novels, the first in the long My Friends series. They were accepted en bloc before the first was published, a unique event in British publishing at that time. When her partner died in 1958 she settled in Jemimaville in the Black Isle. The My Friends series eventually ran to 19 titles, all published under the pseudonym ‘Jane Duncan’. The heroine’s name, Janet Sandison, is that of the author’s mother. She also published children’s stories written for, and fictionally about, her brother’s young family. A separate, four-novel series appeared under the pseudonym ‘Janet Sandison’; they are, fictionally, the novels that Janet in the My Friends series is writing in secret. Although not ­autobiographical, the My Friends novels follow to a large extent the course of her life. A critic suggests that she ‘had faced and transformed in fiction the losses and compensations that textured her life’ (Hart and Hart 1997, p. 470). marb

s­ upported the local Presbyterian parish, despite being a devout Catholic. She was buried in the grounds of Mount Cameron. Today, citizens of East Kilbride remember her as a local heroine and have marked her burial site with a plaque commemorating her contribution to the Jacobite cause. Two other ‘Jean Camerons’ participated in the ’45; one, an Edinburgh milliner, was captured in Stirling and imprisoned in Edinburgh Castle in 1746. She later ran a shop in the Lawnmarket (possibly a Jacobite front) and died penniless in the Canongate. mes • Anon. (1847) ‘A Highland chief one hundred years ago’, from the Dublin Univ. Magazine, September 1847, Clan Cameron Archives, http://www.clan-cameron.org; Arbuthnot, A. (1746) Memoirs of the Remarkable Life and Surprizing Adventures of Miss Jenny Cameron; Craig, M. (1997) Damn’ Rebel Bitches: the women of the ’45. CAMERON, Katharine [baptised Catherine], m. Kay, born Glasgow 26 Feb. 1874, died Edinburgh

21 August 1965. Artist-illustrator. Daughter of Margaret Johnston Robertson, and Rev. Robert Cameron of Paisley, United Presbyterian minister. Eighth of nine children, Katharine Cameron was sister to David Young Cameron (1865–1945), artist and etcher, and a childhood friend of writer *Anna Buchan. Befriended in her teens by *Elizabeth Sharp, the anthologist-Celtic Twilight writer, she conceived art in terms of a ‘Gospel’. One of the ‘immortals’ as well as one of the *Glasgow Girls (GSA 1899–1901), she drew illustrations for The Magazine (1893–6) and The Yellow Book (1886–7) before studying at the Académie Colarossi, Paris with Gustave Courtois (1902). A skilled etcher, printmaker and painter, Katharine Cameron illustrated for T. C. & E. C. Jack, T. N. Foulis, and Nelson’s, and was particularly known for her flower paintings. She worked from a studio in a house shared with family in Stirling, then moved to Edinburgh where her studio was in Forres Street (1908–28). In 1928, after his divorce, she married collector and businessman Arthur Kay (1861–1939). Katharine Cameron designed the cover and dust jacket for his book Treasure Trove in Art (1939). She continued to paint into old age. A member of the GSLA, the RSW (1897–1965) and the SSA (1909), she exhibited regularly with the RGIFA (1891–1965) and the RSA (1894–1964), becoming an FRSA in 1950. ra

• Glasgow University Library, Special Collections: 1950–74, literary MSS and correspondence. Duncan, J., Works as above, and (1975) Letter from Reachfar. See also (Bibl.). Hart, L. L. and Hart, F. R. (1997) ‘Jane Duncan: the homecoming of imagination’, in HSWW (Bibl.); ODNB (2004); Rippetoe, R. E. (2017) Reappraising Jane Duncan: sexuality, race and colonialism in the My Friends novels.

born Glendessary c. 1698, died Mount Cameron 1772. Jacobite. Daughter of Jane Cameron, and Hugh Cameron of Glendessary. Jenny Cameron lived a quiet life until on 19 August 1745 she rode to the Raising of the Standard at Glenfinnan at the head of 300 Cameron men. Almost overnight, ‘Bonnie Jeanie Cameron’ became the darling of the Whig propagandists. Among her many alleged exploits, she is said to have possessed a voracious sexual appetite (unleashed on sibling, servant, soldier and sovereign alike), borne several illegitimate children, and enjoyed a variety of dubious careers as Queen of the Highland Rovers, a transvestite, and a smuggler. By the 1750s, Jenny Cameron was a legend, although at the cost of her good name. By contrast, another account calls her ‘always a person of the greatest propriety of conduct and character’ (Anon. 1847). After the ’45, she kept a low profile, retreating to the estate of Mount Cameron, which she purchased in 1751. There she fostered orphans of the ’45, ran a school, and

CAMERON, Jenny (Jean),

• NLS: Acc. 8950, Acc. 11164:4; SNPG: PG 2607. Addison, R. (2000) ‘Glasgow Girl: Katharine Cameron’, Scottish Book Collector, 6/9, pp. 4–7; Burkhauser, J. (ed.)

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Cameron, the home she had built in Courmayeur. In 1938, during a trip to Ruwenzori, Africa, she became the first woman to climb the two peaks of Mount Kenya. Una Cameron returned to Scotland for the Second World War, driving for the Auxiliary Fire Service, then joining the FANYs. Thereafter, she returned to her adopted home, which she bequeathed to the Valle d’Aosta region. In 2002, the Villa Cameron became the designated site for the Montagna Sicura Foundation, its aim being to promote the safe use and study of the mountains she loved (Bieller 2002, pp. 5, 98). cao

(1990) Glasgow Girls; ODNB (2004); Smith, W. (1992) D Y Cameron: the visions of the hills. CAMERON, Mary Margaret, m. Millar, born Portobello 9 March 1865, died Turnhouse 15 Feb. 1921. Artist. Daughter of Mary Brown Small, and Duncan Cameron, stationer and steel pen patentee. An avid traveller, admirer of Velasquez and talented linguist, fluent in Spanish, Italian and French, Mary Cameron studied art in Spain, and in Paris with Courtois and Rixen. Her first equine paintings dated from military research on the 1870 Franco-Prussian war – she later studied anatomy and kept her own horse. Her portrait of her sister Flora received an Honourable Mention in the 1904 Paris Salon, but her most ambitious paintings during the 1900s depicted Spanish bullfighting scenes. The French government adopted one of the most successful (Picadors About to Enter the Bullring, 1901) as a postcard to promote its opposition to bullfighting in France (not her own position). In 1905, Mary Cameron married Alexis Millar, a horse dealer. She exhibited widely and was a member of several British artists’ associations, including the SSA, Women’s International Art Club, and the Edinburgh Lady Artists’ Club. Her ‘extraordinary’ and ‘powerful’ pictures (Queen 1910, p. 1101) were well reviewed and frequently reproduced in the press. JVH

• Alpine Club Archives, London: G25 Ladies’ Alpine Club, application form (1929), climbing lists (1927–39); NLS: Acc. 10384, Una Cameron’s climbing diaries, 1931–9: Cameron, U. (1932) A Good Line. Bieller, C. (2002) Una Cameron: La Scozzese del Monte Bianco; Merz, J. (2000) The Ladies’ Alpine Club 1907–1975: Index, pp. 26–8 (full list of climbs, artwork, photographs and articles for the LAC Jour.); *ODNB (2004); Smith, J. A. (1988–89) ‘In Memoriam’, Alpine Jour., 93, pp. 323–36. www.fondazionemontagnasicura.org CAMPBELL, Lady Agnes, born western Highlands c. 1525, died c. 1601. Resistance leader, Ireland. Daughter of Janet Gordon, and Colin Campbell, 3rd Earl of Argyll. Agnes Campbell’s marriage, in 1545, to James MacDonnell of Dunyvaig and the Glens (d. 1565), united MacDonald and Campbell power in the west of Scotland. Her children included *Finola O’Donnell. Agnes Campbell played a central role in the ties between Scotland and Ireland in a period of increasing Tudor colonial ambition. Her first husband died a prisoner of Shane O’Neill in 1565. Her direct role in Ulster politics began in 1569 when she arrived in Ireland to marry Turlough Luineach O’Neill (c. 1530–95), Shane O’Neill’s successor as chief. She brought a dowry of 1,200 Scottish mercenary troops. She was in a position to command her troops against English colonial forces due to customary Gaelic law which allowed wives to retain considerable control over their dowries. If dowries included troops and ships then those women played an active role in military and political events. Agnes Campbell was at the centre of a Scottish-Irish network. She was credited with ruling and directing her chieftain husband, and making herself strong in Ireland. Her role in the Desmond rebellion of 1579 to 1583 was described by contemporaries as an attempt to make a new Scotland of Ulster. It was Agnes Campbell

• Anon. ‘Miss Mary Cameron: work of a woman artist in Spain’, Westminster Gazette, 14 June 1910, p. 12; Helland, J. (2000) Professional Women Painters in Nineteenth-Century Scotland; MSW; ‘Round the Galleries – Miss M. Cameron’, Queen, 18 June 1910. CAMERON, Una May, born West Linton, Peeblesshire, 6 May 1904, died Buckingham, 15 Oct. 1987. Mountaineer. Twin daughter of Jeanie Dewar, of the whisky family, and Ewen Cameron, landed proprietor. Una Cameron was educated in Montreux, Switzerland, Cheltenham Ladies’ College and the Central School of Arts and Crafts, London. In 1929, after several seasons climbing in the Alps and Dolomites, she attained membership of the Ladies’ Alpine Club and became a leading light there (president 1957), due to her climbing achievements all over the world and contributions to its Journal. In 1932, with two companion guides, she travelled to Kazbek, Russia, to climb in the Caucasus ­mountains, a journey recounted in her book, A Good Line (1932). During the 1930s she pioneered climbs in the Mont Blanc range from Villa

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who was commissioned to raise munitions from Scottish supporters. She was recorded as being highly educated and intelligent. Sir Henry Sidney negotiated with her in 1579, and she was reported to have spoken Latin in her dealings with English colonial authorities. From a cultivated circle of Gaelic-speaking aristocrats, she could also communicate fluently in English and Latin. Agnes Campbell returned to Scotland in 1583 in order to raise financial aid for the Irish rebellion. She was credited by the English as a central figure and cause of the rebellion in Ireland. For the remainder of her life she, together with her daughter, worked to train Scottish mercenaries in Ireland, and acted as a go-between and ­negotiator. aek

After Agnes Campbell’s remarriage to Patrick Tailfer in 1681, she fought to maintain her independence against her new husband’s creditors and, after petitioning Parliament in 1693, was empowered to act independently of him in everything connected with her printing business. In 1704, she purchased an estate at Roseburn, and became known formally as Lady Roseburn. At the age of 72, in 1709, she established the Valleyfield paper mill at Penicuik, and in early 1712 became printer to the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland. She had at least eight children, but several died young and the early death of her son James in 1693 meant that the business could not be inherited by her heirs. In her will she left the remarkable fortune of £78,197 (Scots), having inherited from her husband only £7,451 (Scots) in debts. JR

• NRS: GD 112/39 (1564); National Archives, Kew, Calendar of State Papers, Ireland, vols 29 (1569), 30 (1570). Knox, A. (2002) ‘Barbarous and pestiferous women’, in Y. G. Brown and R. Ferguson (eds) Twisted Sisters; ODNB (2004).

• Campbell, A. (1685) To the Right Honourable the Lord High Chancellor . . . The humble petition of His Majesties printer and servants; Campbell, A. and Anderson, J. (1688) Answers for James Anderson and Agnes Campbell his mother, to the Complaint exhibite against them . . ., (1712) A Brief Reply to the Letter from Edinburgh Relating to the Case of Mrs Anderson, Her Majesty’s Printer in Scotland. Fairley, J. A. (1925) Agnes Campbell Lady Roseburn, relict of Andrew Anderson the King’s Printer; Mann, A. J. (1998) ‘Book commerce, litigation and the art of monopoly: the case of Agnes Campbell, royal printer, 1676–1712’, Scot. Econ. and Soc. Hist, 18, 2, (1999) ‘Embroidery to enterprise: the role of women in the book trade of early modern Scotland’ in E. Ewan and M. M. Meikle (eds) Women in Scotland c. 1100–c. 1750, (2000) The Scottish Book Trade 1500–1720; ODNB (2004); Watson, J. (1713) The History of the Art of Printing.

CAMPBELL, Agnes (Lady Roseburn), baptised Edinburgh 1 Sept. 1637, died Edinburgh 24 July 1716. Printer, book trader, businesswoman. Daughter of Isobel Orr, and James Campbell, ­merchant. In 1656 Agnes Campbell married Andrew Anderson (c. 1635–76), son of a leading Glasgow printer. Her husband was appointed printer to Edinburgh Town Council and its college in 1663, becoming a burgess through his wife’s right of inheritance from her father. In 1671, he became the King’s Printer for Scotland, with a forty-oneyear grant giving him supervision over the other Scottish presses, a monopoly on the printing and importing of bibles and exemption from paper duties. After his death in June 1676, the grant reverted to his heirs. Continuing and extending his business, as ‘Heirs of Andrew Anderson’, Agnes Campbell became the richest Scottish book maker of her time. In 1678, hers was the largest printing business in Edinburgh with sixteen apprentices, and traded extensively in print and paper in Scotland and Ireland; she also lent money to book traders. Her reputation was significantly damaged by the jealousy of rivals. Her contemporary, James Watson, wrote of her as ‘a contentious old woman’ (Watson 1713, Preface) who sought to control and reduce all other printers. However, she behaved just as her opponents did, frequently going to court against those who contravened her monopoly or even against her own workforce, and printing works of variable quality.

fl. 1773. Poet. Daughter of Campbell of Scalpay. Anna Campbell’s one surviving song has assured her a place in the canon of Gaelic literature. On a voyage to visit her, Alan Morrison from Lewis, her fiancé, was drowned. The song, ‘Ailein Duinn shiubhlainn leat’ (‘Brown-haired Alan, I would go with you’) is her lament for him, a poem of intense grief in which image after vivid image is created without any trivial commonplaces to disrupt the sequence. The poem ends: ‘My prayer to God on the throne/That I do not go in soil or linen/In broken earth or hidden place/But in the spot where you went, Alan.’ Legend says a giant wave snatched her coffin overboard on the sea voyage to Rodel in Harris. A more realistic tradition tells that when the ship was caught in a great storm, the funeral party, as a

CAMPBELL, Anna,

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last resort, tipped the coffin into the sea, remembering her prayer. jm ac i

Walker, C. (2014) ‘Dorothea Primrose Campbell: a newly discovered pseudonym, poems, and tales’, Women’s Writing, 21, 4, pp. 592–608.

• Kerrigan, C. (1991) An Anthology of Scottish Women Poets; Sinclair, A. (1879) An t-Oranaiche (The Gaelic Songster).

CAMPBELL, Dorothy see HURD, Dorothy (1883–1945)

baptised and probably born Lerwick, 4 May 1793, died London 6 Jan. 1863. First published Shetland poet, novelist, schoolmistress. Daughter of Elizabeth Scott, and Duncan Campbell, army surgeon. After her childhood in Lerwick and Laxfirth, Dorothea Campbell attended school in Inverness; there she offered publisher J. Young a volume of poems to help her impoverished family. Francis Jeffrey later praised Poems (1811) for its promise and originality. Following her father’s death she returned to Lerwick to support her siblings and mother, opening a modest school in 1813. She also joined a verse correspondence in the Ladies’ Monthly Museum, a popular London periodical, forging an identity for herself in a literary community that publicly lauded her work and sympathised with her struggles. Under the pseudonym ‘Ora’ of Thule, she published 52 lyric and narrative poems and six tales between 1813 and 1821. Hoping to alleviate her financial distress, the editor of the Monthly Museum, J. W. H. Payne, organised a subscription for a revised and expanded edition of her Poems (1816), dedicated to Sir Walter Scott, with whom Dorothea Campbell later corresponded, but sales proved disappointing. Her sole novel, Harley Radington: a tale (1821), is the first novel set in Shetland: shipwrecked and exposed to the local customs and dialect, the London-born hero discovers his previously unknown Zetlandic relations. Dorothea Campbell moved to London in 1841, but a promised job as governess failed to materialise; unable to find work, she petitioned the Royal Literary Fund for financial help in 1844 and was awarded £30. In 1854 she became an inmate of the Aged Governesses’ Asylum, Kentish Town, where she was joined by her sister in 1862. One of the first Shetland writers, she is also significantly among the first to depict its culture, folklore and dialect in literature. CHW CAMPBELL, Dorothea Primrose,

born before May 1607, died Edinburgh Feb. 1675. Correspondent and patron of ministers. Daughter of Lady Agnes Douglas, and Archibald Campbell, 7th Earl of Argyll. One of four children, Jane Campbell was married by 1626 to John Gordon of Lochinvar (c. 1599–1634), created Viscount Kenmure in 1633. Her husband presented the covenanting preacher and writer Samuel Rutherford to the local parish of Anwoth, Galloway. Jane Campbell and the minister became lifelong spiritual friends. He wrote 49 letters to her, more than to anyone else, offering her spiritual counsel as she lost her three infant daughters and other family members. He attended her husband on his deathbed. Jane Campbell’s last child, John, was born after his father’s death, but died in 1639. In 1640 she married Sir Henry Montgomerie of Giffen (1614–44), but was soon widowed again. Further sorrow came with the 1661 execution of her brother, Archibald, 8th Earl of Argyll. Throughout these trials, Lady Kenmure was an active patron, correspondent and supporter of persecuted Presbyterian ministers. She was commemorated in Protestant historiography as a model covenanter noblewoman. EE

CAMPBELL, Jane, Lady Kenmure,

• Anderson, J. (1862) The Ladies of the Covenant; Bonar, A. A. (ed.) (1863) Letters of Samuel Rutherford; ODNB (2004) (Bibl.) CAMPBELL, Jane Maud, born Liverpool 13 March 1869, died Lynchburg, Virginia, USA, 13 Dec. 1947. Librarian, pioneer of libraries as community centres, especially for migrants. Daughter of Jane Cameron Campbell and George Campbell. Jane Campbell’s family migrated to the USA when she was 12 years old. After her mother’s death a year later she returned to Edinburgh. She graduated from the University Ladies’ College and the Edinburgh School of Cookery and Domestic Economy, achieving ‘Excellent’ in cleaning and scullery work. Re-migrating to the US, in 1902 she was appointed Head of Public Libraries in Passaic New Jersey, where 55% of inhabitants were foreign born. She regarded the library as the most democratic and inclusive of public institutions that could ‘draw your community together’ (SL, address to

• Campbell, D. P., Works as above and appendix to Walker. London Metropolitan Archives: K/02/00/1; NLS: MSS 3888, ff. 20–1; MSS 3890, ff. 89, 208; MSS 3278, f. 122; BL: Royal Literary Fund, MSS 1093. Grundy, I. (2013) ‘Dorothea Primrose Campbell’, Scottish Women Poets of the Romantic Period; Riddell, L. (2014) ‘“Sir Walter Scott’s piano”: the life and times of Dorothea Primrose Campbell’, The New Shetlander 270, pp. 17–23;

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Norwalk Daughters of the American Revolution, Nov. 1904, p. 10). Working against prejudice, she made the library an agency of Americanisation and a place where migrant culture was respected. She stocked foreign language books and took advice about acquisitions from locals such as the barber, who considered the Life of Garibaldi a book ‘every Italian must read and love before he could understand what Washington, Lincoln and Grant meant to Americans’ (SL, Long Island Library Club c. 1904, p. 7). Fruitful hybridisations resulted, including a Yiddish-speaking Emerson Literary Society which presented a bust of Shakespeare to the library. Her handling of the youth problem was inspired. When the Jesse James gang lit kerosene on the library windows, she gave the lads a room for meeting, at first leaving them alone, later introducing a quiz, with prizes, on questions of sport. Over time she extended the quiz, enticing the boys to use the whole gamut of reference books – an original form of research training. Ironically, her attitude to women was less adventurous. While she arranged craft classes for girls and needlework exhibitions to draw in mothers, she did not follow the New York City examples of Mothers’ Clubs for women who had ‘a devouring desire to “get the English” ’ (Rose 1917, p. 16). She was sensitive to the loneliness of professional women, especially at holiday time when ‘the only thing to do was to take a large sleeping draught and go to bed’ and kept her libraries open for them during public holidays (SL, Talk at Englewood c. 1904, pp. 1–2). In 1910, she went to New York City to work for the North American Civic League and then in 1913 became Educational Director for Work with Immigrants of Massachusetts Library Commission. In 1922, she moved to Lynchburg, Virginia, to join her family, and took initiatives, as Head Librarian, to establish branch libraries in black areas. ey

Jane Maud Campbell, 1869–1947’, Library Quarterly 82, 3, pp. 305–35; Rose, E. (1917) Bridging the Gulf. CAMPBELL, Janet (Jessie), n. Black, born Barrhead, Renfrewshire, 26 March 1827, died Alexandria, Dunbartonshire, 10 Feb. 1907. Campaigner and fundraiser for higher education for women. Daughter of Elizabeth Taylor, and James Black, owner of bleaching fields in Barrhead. In 1846, Jessie Black married James Campbell of Tullichewan Castle (1823–1902), partner in Messrs J. & W. Campbell, wholesale drapers, and cousin of Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman (Liberal Prime Minister 1905). They had five children. Interested in improving local cultural activities, James Campbell supported his wife’s wish to develop facilities for the higher education of women. Through their social connections, Jessie Campbell enlisted the help of John Nichol, Professor of English Literature, to start lectures for ladies in Glasgow in 1868. This successful venture developed into the AHEW and, in 1883, Queen Margaret College for Women. Jessie Campbell remained involved, raising £20,000 to endow the college, the condition insisted upon by *Isabella Elder, who had bought North Park House, Glasgow and given it rent-free as a home for the college. In 1901, Jessie Campbell was awarded the honorary degree of LLD by the University of Glasgow, and is depicted in the memorial window to *Janet Galloway in Bute Hall there. cjm

• Glasgow Univ.: Queen Margaret Coll. Archives. Book of the Jubilee (1451–1901) (1901) pp. 126–38; McAlpine, C. J. (1997) The Lady of Claremont House ; ODNB (2004). CAMPBELL, Katherine, Countess of Crawford,

born before 1538, died Brechin Castle, 1 Oct. 1578. Matriarch. Daughter of *Muriel Calder, heiress of Calder (Cawdor), and Sir John Campbell, first knight of Calder. Katherine Campbell married, before 1 October 1539, James, Master of Ogilvy who was killed at Pinkie (November 1547). They had three surviving children, one son and two daughters. No later than 12 November 1550, Katherine married David Lindsay of Edzell, 9th Earl of Crawford, with whom she had five sons and two daughters. In September 1558, she was widowed again, and for the remainder of her life was not required to re-marry. Both her husbands appointed Katherine tutrix testamentary and custodian to their children, giving her an influential role as custodian

• Schlesinger Library (SL) of the History of American Women, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard Univ.: MC382 (Edinburgh School of Cookery Bursar’s Certificate, 13 Dec. 1886 and other papers). Campbell, J. M. (1908) ‘Public libraries and the immigrant’, New York Libraries, pp. 100–5, 132–6, (1913) ‘What the foreigner has done for the library’, Library Journal, 38, pp. 610–5, (1916) ‘Americanizing books and periodicals for immigrants’, American Library Association Bulletin, 10, pp. 269–72. Jones, P. A. (1999) Libraries, Immigrants and the American Experience, (2012) ‘The awakening of the social conscience:

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of the heirs to Airlie and Edzell. As dowager Countess, she devoted her energies to building and maintaining her sons’ inheritance, defending her own and her sons’ rights against the 10th Earl of Crawford, the Earl of Argyll and a host of others. She arranged marriages for most of the children. Before her death, she dictated a lengthy testament, remembering all her surviving children with personal bequests. mv

before taking up a post in Glasgow as housemaid to a Colonel McIvor, which she was to start at Martinmas (11 November). She herself had never spoken of emigration. A statue of ‘Highland Mary’ stands on Castle Hill, Dunoon. mb • Ayrshire Archaeological Society (1996) Mauchline Memories of Robert Burns. Bell, M. (2001) Tae The Lasses; Bolton, J. (1994) Love of Highland Mary; Hill, J. C. (1961) The Love Songs and Heroines of Robert Burns; Munro, A. (1896) The Story of Burns and Highland Mary; ODNB (2004) (Burns, Robert); Paton, N. R. (1994) Thou Ling’ring Star ; Ross, J. D. (1894) Highland Mary.

• NRS: Acc. 9769 Crawford Muniments, 3/1, 3/2; GD16 Airlie Muniments; RD1 Register of Deeds; CC8/8/7 Register of Testaments; NRA(S) 237 Haigh Inventory. Bardgett, F. (1989) Scotland Reformed: the Reformation in Angus and the Mearns; Lindsay, Lord (1858) Lives of the Lindsays, 3 vols; *ODNB (2004); Verschuur, M. (2006) A Noble and Potent Lady: Katherine Campbell Countess of Crawford.

CAMPBELL of Canna, Margaret Fay Shaw Margaret Fay (1903–2004)

see SHAW,

CAMPBELL, Marion, n. Maclellan (Mor Aonghais mhic Eachainn) born South Uist 4 August 1867,

CAMPBELL, Margaret (Mary) (Highland Mary),

born Auchamore, Dunoon, c. 18 March 1766, died Greenock c. 20 Oct. 1786. Domestic servant and lover of Robert Burns, poet. Daughter of Agnes Campbell, and Archibald Campbell, seaman. Tradition states that Margaret Campbell began her working life in 1778 as a servant to the Kirk family in Campbeltown before working for the Rev. David Campbell in Lochranza, Arran. By 1784, she was a dairymaid at Coilsfield, owned by Hugh Montgomerie, before being employed at Mauchline Castle in early 1785 by Robert Burns’s friend Gavin Hamilton. Hugh Montgomerie’s household worshipped at Tarbolton Kirk, also frequented by Robert Burns, and it has been suggested that the couple met there. According to Burns, they met in March 1786 after *Jean Armour’s parents sent her to Paisley because of her pregnancy, but Burns’s brother Gilbert and sister Isabella both stated that he had known Margaret Campbell long before then and that the couple were romantically involved. On 14 May 1786, Robert Burns and ‘Highland Mary’ parted at Failford and she returned to Campbeltown. Burns wrote years later that they had planned to emigrate to Jamaica and she had returned home to take leave of her family. She and her brother went to Greenock in October, where they lodged with relatives named McPherson at 31 Upper Charles Street. Margaret Campbell died that autumn from typhoid and was buried in the West Highland Churchyard. It was often implied, but never proved, that she was pregnant to Burns. Some also claim she went to Greenock not to meet Burns to go to Jamaica but

died South Uist 15 Jan. 1970. Daughter of Mary Wilson, and Angus Maclellan, grasskeeper; MACDONALD, Catherine (Kate), n. Campbell, born 23 June 1897, died 27 May 1977. Daughter of Marion Maclellan, and Neil Campbell, crofter. Tradition-bearers. Marion Campbell and Kate MacDonald were two of the foremost exponents of Gaelic song and music in South Uist, an island with rich resources of folklore and poetry. Marion Campbell, a monoglot Gaelic speaker, was an accomplished teller of stories, from international folktales to local legends and personal ‘memorates’. Among the most prized items in both women’s repertoire were heroic ballads of the type on which James MacPherson based his 18th-century ‘Ossian’. They were also exponents of the art of canntaireachd, chanting of pipe tunes to a syllabic code of vowels and consonants, used in teaching pipe-music. Marion Campbell was over 80 when first recorded; for two decades, she made an enormous contribution to the archives of the School of Scottish Studies at the University of Edinburgh. Both women had an impressive knowledge of waulking songs (sung while fulling or thickening cloth). Kate MacDonald probably learned additional items from other sources. She was expert at singing puirt-a-beul – songs associated with dance tunes – and recorded more than 250 songs. Unusually, she played pipe tunes, although only on the chanter. Traditionally the playing of bagpipes, associated with war, was a masculine art. However, her daughter, Rhona Lightfoot, is one of Scotland’s leading pipers. jm ac i 76

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herself having waking dreams in which she seemed to overhear conversations in Gaelic. That led to her adult novel The Dark Twin (1973), a mystical romance set in the Scotland of 500 bc, which became a cult novel among students in the USA: American interest led to film rights being taken on this and other work in the 1990s. In 1990 Mary Sandeman and Marion Campbell moved to a small house on the seaward side of the castle. Mary, who was an Elder of the Kilberry Session of the Church of Scotland, continued to carry out practical work for the church and at the castle (wielding an axe to clear fallen branches on the day before her death in 1995). Marion spent many years researching her biography of Alexander III, King of Scots (1999) and also editing letters from her forebears in Jamaica and other colonies to family in Argyll. Both tasks were completed shortly before her death. marb/el

• Campbell, J. L. and Collinson, F. (eds) (1977–81) Hebridean Folk Songs, vols 2, 3; ‘Mór Bean Nill’ in J. L. Campbell (2004) A Very Civil People, H. Cheape, ed., pp. 31–8; MacDonald, D. A. (1977) ‘Kate MacDonald’, Tocher, 27.

born Brompton 16 Dec. 1919, died Oban 13 June 2000. Farmer and landowner, writer, archaeologist and councillor. Daughter of Marion Durand, and John Campbell of Kilberry, landowner. Marion Campbell was brought up on her family’s estate in Argyll. She was only eight when, on her father’s death in 1928, she first inherited the West Highland castle and 3,500-acre estate of Kilberry, overlooking the Sound of Jura. It was sold three years later to a cousin, but returned to her in 1938. She was educated at Queen Margaret’s School, Edinburgh, and by correspondence through the Parents’ National Educational Union. During the Second World War, instead of going to university she served with the ATS and the WRNS; during rescue work in a Glasgow air raid, she sustained a back injury that troubled her throughout her life. After 1944, she successfully ran three farms on the estate while pursuing her interest in local history and archaeology. Marion Campbell’s former schoolfriend Mary Sandeman (1917–95), who was raised on Jura and had also served in the WRNS during the war, joined her at Kilberry in 1954. This was the beginning of a personal and working partnership which was to last until Mary’s death. Mary Sandeman helped start the Mid-Argyll Antiquarian Society, and both women published articles in the society’s magazine, KIST. They joined the SNP in the 1960s, Marion Campbell serving as chair of the Mid Argyll District Council for four years. Together and with others, they undertook a field survey of the archaeology of Mid Argyll (Proc. Soc. Antiquaries Scot. 1962) which is the basis for much later research. Marion Campbell’s energetic promotion of Argyll spurred the opening of Auchindrain museum of farming life in 1967 and the Kilmartin House Museum in 1997. The history and landscape of Argyll informs her best-known book Argyll: the enduring heartland (1977), which includes poetry, by herself and others, in Gaelic and English. Having given up farming in the mid-1950s to concentrate on writing and politics, Marion Campbell also published several historical adventures for children, beginning with The Wide Blue Road (1957). At a time of stress and depression she found CAMPBELL, Marion, of Kilberry,

• Campbell, M., Works as above, see Davis below, and (1962) (with Mary Sandeman) ‘Mid Argyll: an archaeological survey’, Proc. Soc. Antiquaries Scot. 95, pp. 1–125. Sandeman, M. (1996) When the years were young, (ed. Campbell, M.). Ascherson, N. (2001) Foreword to Argyll: the enduring heartland; Colin, B. ‘The player’, Scotsman Weekend, 5 April 1997; Davis, M. (1999) ‘Marion Campbell: a bibliography’, Argyll & Bute Council; Pallister, M. and McGilp, D. A. (2007) Yesterday Was Summer: the Marion Campbell story; The Scotsman, 15 June 2000 (obit.). CAMPBELL, Marioun (Mòr nighean Dhonnchaidh)

born c. 1540s, died after 1601. Gaelic poet. Daughter of Janet Robertson, and Duncan Campbell, Donnchadh Ruadh na Féile, second of Glen Lyon. Marioun Campbell married Griogair Ruadh MacGregor of Glen Strae around 1565, amid his ongoing feud with her cousin, Cailean Liath, sixth Campbell chieftain of Glen Orchy. Hostilities concluded with Griogair Ruadh’s execution in 1570. Her lament for his death, ‘Grioghal Cridhe’, composed soon afterwards, suggests that Marioun too was held in prison until the birth of their second son. In the early 1570s she married Raibeart Menzies of Comrie, with whom she had two more children. ‘Grioghal Cridhe’ compares the sterile material comfort of her second marriage with the happiness of her first. Its syllabic format suggests that Marioun Campbell received some formal education in the classical Gaelic poetic tradition, and her poetry is a remarkably accurate source for key events in the 1560s phase of the 77

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Campbell/MacGregor feud. Two other poems, describing familial opposition to her first marriage (composed c. 1562), were collected during the 1770s but identified only recently; ‘Grioghal Cridhe’, printed in 1813, remains current in Scottish Gaelic oral tradition. KLM

only NPS woman parliamentary candidate of the inter-war years, she stood twice in Glasgow St Rollox, at the by-election of May 1931 and at the subsequent 1931 general election. Her polls of 15.8% and 13.3% respectively were among the then best nationalist results. A teacher in Greenock, she was refused leave of absence during both campaigns yet still ‘attended on average seven meetings each night’ (Scots Independent, Dec. 1931, p. 22). Her marriage to fellow nationalist Thomas Gibson in March 1932 and his employment in London removed both from the Scottish political scene. cb

• Blankenhorn, V. (2014) ‘“Grioghal Cridhe”: aspects of transmission in the Lament for Griogair Ruadh Mac Griogair of Glen Strae’, Scottish Studies 37, pp. 6‒37; Dawson, J. (1997) Campbell letters 1559–1583; MacGregor, M. (1999) ‘“Surely one of the greatest poems ever made in Britain”: the lament for Griogair Ruadh MacGregor of Glen Strae and its historical background’, in E. J. Cowan and D. Gifford (eds) The Polar Twins, (2018) ‘“Tha Mulad Air M’Inntinn”: a third song by Marion Campbell of Glen Lyon’, Aiste, 5.

• Scots Independent, 1930–32. CAMPBELL, Willielma, Viscountess Glenorchy, n. Maxwell, born Kirkcudbright 2 Sept. 1741, died

born Riccarton 19 Nov. 1812, died St Andrews 15 Jan. 1886. Composer. Daughter of Sir D. J. Campbell of Skerrington. Mary Campbell’s place in Scottish music history comes from writing both words and music of the famous ‘March of the Cameron Men’. She apparently composed the ballad in 1829, at the age of 16, after hearing the story of Cameron of Lochiel and of how his clansmen, from Lochaber, ‘fiercer than fierceness itself ’, rose to join Prince Charles in 1745. There was a popular edition for pipes alone, as performed by Alexander (MacGregor) Simpson. Mary Campbell (often known as ‘of Pitlour, Fife’) composed other works for the piano, including a waltz movement and a bolero (in BL) and songs including ‘The Mole and the Bat’ (1867). pac

Edinburgh 17 July 1786. Chapel founder. Daughter of Elizabeth Hairstanes, and William Maxwell, medical doctor. Willielma Maxwell’s father died before she was born and she grew up in the home of her stepfather, Lord Alva, later Lord Justice Clerk, in Mylne’s Court, Edinburgh. On 26 September 1761 she married John Campbell, Viscount Glenorchy (1738–71), heir to Lord Breadalbane, who gave the Glenorchys virtual control of his estates. When she was 24, a serious illness and a conversation with the clergyman Rowland Hill, led to her conversion to evangelical Christianity. After her husband’s death in 1771, she used her considerable wealth to assist religious causes, including the educational work of the SPCK (see *Isabella Graham). She funded the construction of a chapel in Edinburgh, which opened in 1774, and between 1776 and 1786 founded chapels elsewhere, including Buxton, Matlock Bath, Workington, Carlisle, Exmouth, Bristol Hot-Wells and Newton Burhill, Devonshire. Lady Glenorchy was a member of the Church of Scotland, although her Edinburgh chapel was not an established church or a Chapel of Ease. Eventually, the General Assembly accepted that the ministers whom she appointed would be recognised by the Edinburgh Presbytery. Initially, the chapel’s pulpit was open to all evangelical clergy, but her increasing commitment to Calvinism led to a break with John Wesley. She appointed Rev. T. S. Jones as minister in 1779 and he served the chapel for 58 years. In 1843, the congregation joined the Free Church of Scotland. Having spent her last years with a niece in George Square, Lady Glenorchy was buried in her chapel in 1786. She left her friend *Darcy, Lady Maxwell, as her executrix. When the chapel was demolished in 1844, Lady Glenorchy’s remains were moved

CAMPBELL, Mary Maxwell,

• Cohen, A. I. (1987, 2nd edn.) International Encyclopedia of Women Composers; Hixon, D. L. and Hennessee, D. (1975) Women in Music; Stern, G. (1978) Women Composers; (1913) Women Composers.

m. Gibson, born Cathcart 14 Jan. 1901, died Dalbeattie 28 Feb. 1983. Parliamentary candidate for the National Party of Scotland (NPS). Daughter of Isobel Hunter, and Duncan Campbell, Merchant Navy captain. A University of Glasgow graduate, teacher and former Conservative debating champion, Elma Campbell rose rapidly on joining the NPS. In 1930 she was Joint Convener of the Women’s Section, member of the organisation, finance, press and publications, and bazaar committees, and the National Council. She was credited with being ‘one of our most brilliant speakers’, addressing audiences of ‘over four thousand in St Andrew’s Halls, Glasgow’ (Scots Independent, Jan. 1930, p. 28). The

CAMPBELL, Wilhelmina Allison (Elma),

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to St John’s parish church, and eventually to the Roxburgh Place Chapel (1859). KBER

Ashburton (1805–57). Jane Welsh Carlyle suffered illness and depression. But her letters written at this time contain as much wit in relation to her feelings as to any other of her subjects, and her journal, while recording the intensity of her depression and illness, also records a very active social life of her own. In February 1856, she was one of the signatories of the petition for a married women’s property act, a rare public act on her part. Jane Welsh Carlyle’s sudden death (while her husband was away becoming Rector of the University of Edinburgh) led to his collecting all her surviving letters and preparing them for publication after his own death. He thought they equalled and surpassed ‘whatever of best I know to exist in that kind’ (Carlyle 1881, p. 161), setting the tone for much of the commentary on her work. There are many contemporary and subsequent descriptions of her storytelling abilities. But it was those who recognised her as an accomplished writer whose skill was evident in her letters and other pieces, rather than a ‘missing novelist’, who came closest to assessing her real worth. *Margaret Oliphant assessed her talk in terms that apply to her writing: ‘the power of narration . . . the flashes of keen wit and sarcasm, occasionally even a little sharpness, and always the modifying sense of humour under all’ (Oliphant 1990, p. 98). For Virginia Woolf, her letters owed ‘their incomparable brilliance to the hawk-like swoop and descent of her mind upon facts’ (Woolf 1932, p. 198). Her choice was to write privately, and her reputation rests firmly and justifiably on the skill and power of the life-writing that survives. abc

• Dunlop, A. I. (1989) The Kirks of Edinburgh 1560–1984; Jones, T. S. (1822) The Life of Willielma, Viscountess Glenorchy; ODNB (2004); Scott, H. (1915) Fasti Eccesiae Scoticanae, vol. 1, pp. 78–80; Thomson, D. P. (1967) Lady Glenorchy and Her Churches. CARLYLE, Jane Welsh,‡ n. Welsh, born Haddington 14 July 1801, died London 22 April 1866. Letterwriter. Daughter of Grace (Grizel) Welsh, and Dr John Welsh (not related). Jane Welsh Carlyle was known during her life in the private roles of witty story teller and letter writer and as the wife of Thomas Carlyle ­(1795–1881), the Scottish essayist and historian. She left about 2,000 surviving letters, plus some short prose pieces, ‘Much Ado About Nothing’ (1849), ‘The Simple Story of my Own First Love’ (1852), ‘Budget of a Femme Incomprise’ (1855), an anecdotal notebook (1845–52) and her Journal (1855–6). Educated at local Haddington schools and privately tutored, she learnt Latin and ‘strove to “be a Boy” in education’ (Carlyle 1881, p. 69) to please her father; she also briefly attended Miss Hall’s school, Leith Walk, Edinburgh, 1817–18. After meeting Jane Welsh in 1821, Thomas Carlyle courted her by letter, encouraging her to read German and to write. Jane (and her mother) eventually agreed to the marriage, which took place on 17 October 1826. The Carlyles lived in 21 Comely Bank, Edinburgh, until the move in 1828 to Craigenputtoch, Nithsdale, an isolated moorland household, where Thomas wrote and Jane supported his ‘genius’. Later she presented that time as entirely miserable but a triumph for her resourcefulness. In 1834 they left to live in 5 Cheyne Row, London, where she held court to those who came to admire Thomas Carlyle, including literary men and women, intellectuals, many visiting Americans, young radicals from Ireland, and revolutionaries in exile from Europe such as Giuseppe Mazzini. Jane Welsh Carlyle also had her own circle of admirers, including the novelist and reviewer, Geraldine Jewsbury (1812–80), whose writing career she encouraged. During her early years in London, Jane Welsh Carlyle prided herself on the frugal Scottish organisation of their modest, one-servant household, while Thomas Carlyle made his reputation and earned money with lectures and books. As their social circle widened, she felt herself replaced as the centre of his emotional life by his exaggerated and thoughtless admiration for the aristocratic Lady

• NLS: Corr. Jane Welsh Carlyle. The Collected Letters of Thomas and Jane Welsh Carlyle ­(1970–2015) (eds) C. R. Sanders et al., vols 1–43; ECSWW; Letters and Memorials of Jane Welsh Carlyle (1883) J. A. Froude, ed.; Carlyle, T. [1881] (1997) Reminiscences, K. J. F. Fielding and I. Campbell, eds; Oliphant, M. [1899] (1990) Autobiography, E. Jay, ed.; ODNB (2004); Woolf, V. (1932) ‘Geraldine and Jane’, The Common Reader (Second series). CARMICHAEL, Catherine (Kay),‡ n. McIntosh Rankin, m1 Carmichael, m2 Donnison, born Shettleston,

Glasgow 22 Nov. 1925, died Glasgow 26 Dec. 2009. Policy adviser, writer, activist. Daughter of Mary Patricia Price, midwife, and John Dawson Rankin, soldier and civil servant. Kay Rankin faced family problems, illness and disrupted schooling as a child, educating herself chiefly through Tollcross public library. A psychiatric social worker in the 1950s, then Senior Lecturer

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of his great work, Carmina Gadelica. Her mother, Mary Frances Urquhart Macbean (1841–1928), contributed illustrations to the project. Both parents were granted a Civil List pension in recognition of their contributions to Gaelic. Widowed in 1912, Mary Carmichael moved in with Ella and her husband, W. J. Watson (1865–1948), Professor of Celtic at the University of Edinburgh, whom she had married in 1906. Ella Carmichael Watson prepared the second edition of Carmina Gadelica; her preface, written shortly before her death, indicated that she intended to publish further volumes. Her son, James Carmichael Watson, also Professor of Celtic at Edinburgh, later prepared the third and fourth volumes, and edited the poems of *Mairi nighean Alasdair Ruaidh. As acting editor (and sole editor from 1915) of The Celtic Review, Ella Carmichael Watson was largely responsible for preparing it for press. Containing articles on Gaelic literature, history, folktale and dialectology, the Review made a lasting contribution to scholarship. She and her brothers also founded the Edinburgh Gaelic Choir and the Celtic Union, a literary and historical society. jm ac i

at the University of Glasgow, she initiated training for probation officers. In 1948, she married Neil Carmichael, Labour MP, a marriage that lasted 30 years. They had one daughter. Campaigning from the 1960s against the US Polaris missiles near Dunoon and the UK nuclear submarine base at Faslane, she planned peaceful demonstrations with the women’s group Gareloch Horticulturists and served fourteen days in Cornton Vale prison. Kay Carmichael later advised Harold Wilson’s government on social policy and became deputy chair of the Supplementary Benefits Commission (1975–80). As Scottish Office adviser, she helped establish the children’s panel system and the special unit at Glasgow’s Barlinnie prison – a new approach to detention of violent criminals. In 1977 she spent three months in Lilybank, a Glasgow housing scheme, living on around £10 a week, as did many residents. The resulting film was hardhitting, though also caused controversy. Following the first UN Conference on Women in Mexico (1975), she inspired many women’s groups working on gender issues and women’s empowerment in Scotland and chaired the steering group that became the Scottish Drugs Forum. She left Labour in 1994, rejecting Blair’s leadership, later joining the SNP. In 1987 she married Professor David Donnison (1926–2018), former chair of the Supplementary Benefits Commission. An ‘unflagging champion of the marginalised’ (Guardian 2010), Kay Carmichael wrote many articles, a PhD thesis and three books. Ceremony of Innocence: tears, power and protest (1991) and For Crying Out Loud (1993) address gender stereotyping and emotional expression; Sin and Forgiveness (2001) discusses ethical principles in a secular world. KMD

• Carmichael, A. (1928 2nd edn.) Carmina Gadelica, E. Carmichael Watson, ed.; Celtic Review (1904–16); ODNB (2004) (Carmichael, Alexander); Watson, J. C. (1941) ‘Mary Frances Macbean’, in Carmina Gadelica, iv.

n. Scott, born Edinburgh 7 Aug. 1743, died Charleton, Montrose, 14 April 1821. Poor relief campaigner. Daughter of Mary Brown, and David Scott, landowner and Treasurer of the Bank of Scotland. Educated at home, Susan Scott composed and published poems, sketched, and became fluent in French and Italian. She married the wealthy George Carnegie on 17 March 1769 and settled at Charleton House near Montrose. Her father and husband agreed a marriage contract, which ensured that estates were endowed on her. Eight of her nine children survived infancy, although three of her soldier sons predeceased her, two in India; her husband, 18 years her senior, died in 1799. Susan Carnegie used her privileged position and forceful personality to improve local conditions. She rose at five each morning to deal with correspondence. She wrote letters and printed anonymous pamphlets encouraging funding for a hospital for the mentally ill who had hitherto been housed in prisons. Aided by the provost, she founded the first asylum in Scotland, built in

CARNEGIE, Susan‡,

• Carmichael, K., Works as above, and (2017) It Takes a Lifetime to Become Yourself: a collection of writings, Donnison, D. (ed.) The Guardian, 12 Jan. 2010, The Herald/Sunday Herald 29 Dec. 2009, The Scotsman, 31 Dec. 2009 (obits). Personal knowledge.

m. Watson, born Lismore 9 August 1870, died Edinburgh 30 Nov. 1928. Editor and promoter of Gaelic. Daughter of Mary Frances Urquhart Macbean, and Alexander Carmichael, collector of Gaelic tales and songs. Ella Carmichael grew up in Uist, moving to Edinburgh in 1882. A native Gaelic speaker, she assisted her father in the compilation and editing CARMICHAEL, Elizabeth Catherine (Ella),

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of Earl of Carrick in right of Marjory. Their ten children included two kings, Robert I of Scotland and Edward of Ireland, *Isabella Bruce, queen of Norway, and the Scottish independence fighter *Christian Bruce. cjn

Montrose in 1781. With no bridges crossing the rivers, there were many drownings locally; she campaigned for a receiving ward and for life-saving procedures. Susan Carnegie founded the Montrose Female Friendly Society in 1808. In 1815, she enlisted Church support to establish a savings bank for labouring classes. The bank, which encouraged small deposits, opened on 3 April 1815, initially operating for one hour each week. In her will she instructed that pensions from her estate should continue during each recipient’s lifetime. el

• Duncan, A. A. M. (1978) Scotland: the making of the kingdom; Scotichron., vol. 5; SP. CARSWELL, Catherine Roxburgh, n. Macfarlane, m1 Jackson, m2 Carswell, born Glasgow 27 March 1879, died Oxford 18 Feb. 1946. Biographer, novelist, journalist, editor, critic. Daughter of Mary Anne Lewis, and George Gray Macfarlane, merchant. The second of four children, Catherine Macfarlane was educated at Park School for Girls, Glasgow. She studied music for two years at the Frankfurt Conservatorium and English Literature at the University of Glasgow (1901–3), where she won Best Essay Prize (1902). She married Herbert Jackson (b. 1867/8) in 1904 and their daughter Diana was born in 1905. However, Jackson proved to be mentally ill and was permanently hospitalised; the marriage was annulled in a pioneering legal case in 1908. From about 1906, she began reviewing drama and fiction for the Glasgow Herald, commenting on the Irish Players (Abbey Theatre) and D. H. Lawrence’s early novels. She also began a longstanding affair with painter Maurice Greiffenhagen (1862–1931), Director of Life Classes at Glasgow Art School. She moved to London, possibly in 1912 after her mother died, and suffered the tragic death of her daughter in 1913. After breaking with Greiffenhagen, in 1915 she married an old Glasgow friend, journalist Donald Carswell (1882–1940). Their son, John Patrick Carswell (1918–97), became a writer and editor. The Carswells experienced financial strain, often relying on Catherine’s writing after Donald’s unsuccessful pursuit of a legal career. They lived mainly in Buckinghamshire and in London (Hampstead). Catherine Carswell’s career with the Glasgow Herald was dramatically ended by her unsanctioned review of D. H. Lawrence’s controversial The Rainbow in 1915. Her close friend, the writer Ivy Litvinov, had introduced her to Lawrence in 1914, beginning a warm friendship that lasted until his death in 1930. Lawrence invited her comments on what became Women in Love, and criticised drafts of her own first novel, Open the Door! (1920). Begun around 1911, this richly symbolic exploration of emotions and female sexuality

• AUL: MS 2937 Cormack Papers. Cormack, A. A. (1966) Susan Carnegie 1744–1821: her life of service; ODNB (2004). CARRICK, Ellen, c. 1342–c. 1408. Prioress of North Berwick. Ellen Carrick was Prioress at the nunnery of North Berwick 1379–1407. The Carricks were related to the nunnery’s founders, the earls of Fife, through a junior branch of the family; she was probably a member of this branch. She was elected to the office after the death of Beatrice, former Prioress, on or before 20 September 1379. In 1386, she granted a receipt for the rent of the church of Maybole to Sir Alan Cathcart, apparently her only surviving grant. In 1402, she appealed to Pope Benedict XIII, saying that the Bishop of St Andrews had unjustly removed her from her office after a visitation and had made the nuns elect another woman, Matilda de Leys, as Prioress. She pled her case for five years but in 1407 it was left undecided. KP

• HRHS (Bibl.); Innes, C. (ed.) (1847) Carte Monialium de Northberwic.

fl. 1256–92. Heiress. Daughter of Neil, Earl of Carrick. Sole heiress of the lordship of Carrick after 1256, Marjory’s early life was typical of that of a noblewoman: in her teens she was married to Adam of Kilconquhar (d. 1271), from a cadet branch of the native family of Fife, who became Earl of Carrick in right of his wife. However, Marjory also demonstrates how medieval noblewomen might play decisive roles in determining their lives. Later chroniclers relate that, in 1272, the widowed Countess won her second husband, Robert Bruce, lord of Annandale (1243–1304), by seizing him and holding him in honourable captivity until he agreed to marry her; true or not, the couple paid a heavy fine for marrying without royal license. Robert Bruce was permitted to assume the title CARRICK, Marjory, Countess of,

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won the Melrose prize. A second Glasgow-based novel, The Camomile (1922), portrays a young woman becoming a writer. However, her groundbreaking biography, The Life of Robert Burns (1930), attracted hostility: ‘This morning . . . I had an anonymous letter containing a bullet, which I was requested to use upon myself that the world might be left “a brighter cleaner and better place.” ’ (Letter to S. S. Koteliansky 23 Sept. 1930). The book now has considerable status, as does her sympathetic memoir of Lawrence, The Savage Pilgrimage (1932). Her biography of Boccaccio, Tranquil Heart (1937) claimed he was the first author to write avowedly for women (pp. vii–viii). A prolific journalist and editor, Catherine Carswell was The Observer’s assistant drama critic during the First World War, later writing freelance for many publications including the Manchester Guardian during the 1920s and 30s. She also edited poetry and prose collections with Daniel George, co-wrote The Fays of the Abbey Theatre (1935) with William Fay, and edited an anthology, The Scots Week-End (1936), with Donald Carswell. She shared cultural interests with a wide circle of Scottish and other writer friends, especially *Florence Marian McNeill, with whom she corresponded extensively. Saddened by Donald’s sudden death in 1940, Catherine Carswell died six years later. Her son John edited her fragmentary autobiographical writings, published posthumously as Lying Awake (1950). ca

CATRIONA NIC FHEARGHAIS (Christiana Ferguson),

fl. 1745–6. Possibly born in Contin, Ross-shire. Poet. Catriona nic Fhearghais’s father was a blacksmith in Contin and was known for the manufacture of dirks and weapons. She is known for the song ‘Cumha do dh’Uilleam Siseal’ (William Chisholm’s Lament), which she is traditionally believed to have composed for her husband who fell at Culloden. He is said to have carried a banner, a’Bhratach Choimheach, for the Chisholms, and not only aided their retreat from the field but mounted a single-handed defence of a barn sheltering his clansmen. The tune is believed to be original. It was published in 1904. An emotive work, capturing the personal tragedy and loss that war entails, it has been recorded extensively by various artists, a number of whom draw from oral traditions rather than written sources. ABM • Mackenzie, J. (1904, repr. 2001) Sar-obair Nam Bard Gaelach. The Beauties of Gaelic Poetry, pp. 373–4. CAVANAGH, Catherine (Kate),

born Glasgow 4 Dec. 1951, died Edinburgh 15 Nov. 2008. Social worker and social science researcher into domestic violence. Daughter of Adeline Martin MacGill, seamstress, and John Cavanagh, spirit salesman. Kate Cavanagh attended Holyrood Secondary School in Glasgow, earned two degrees from Stirling University (BA, 1975; MSc, 1978), and a PhD (1998) from Manchester University. In the 1970s, with Monica Wilson, she worked as a research assistant with Rebecca and Russell Dobash on the first study in Britain of violence against women, examining 12,000 police records and interviewing 104 women in the first refuges opened by Scottish Women’s Aid (cf. Dobash and Dobash 1979). Kate Cavanagh was a social worker in the 1980s. In 1989, she and Ruth Lewis were appointed research fellows on the Dobashes’ project, ‘Evaluating Abuser Programmes’, that examined court records and interviewed men convicted of violent abuse and their women partners (2000). The same team studied murder in Britain, examining 866 case files and interviewing 200 men and women convicted of murder, in prisons across England and Scotland. Kate Cavanagh drew on these findings for her Manchester PhD thesis. Married to Graeme Forbes, Head of Collections Management at the NLS, with two children, Kate Cavanagh held posts as a social worker, lecturer in Social Work at Glasgow

• BL: Add. MS 48975, ff. 163–210, letters of Catherine Carswell to S. S. Koteliansky, Koteliansky papers; Mitchell Library, Glasgow: Acc. 898053, corr., Catherine Carswell papers, see also the Robert Burns Collection; NLS: MS 19705, Manuscripts Division, Catherine Carswell; Univ. of Nottingham Library, Dept. of Manuscripts and Special Collections: GB 0159 CC, Papers of Catherine Carswell (D. H. Lawrence correspondence and books); BBC Written Archives Centre, Reading: Catherine Carswell ­collection. Carswell, C., Work as above, and see Selected Letters of Catherine Carswell (2007); Catherine Carswell’s War: Letters 1939–1946 (2016), both J. Pilditch (ed.). Anderson, C. (ed.) (2001) Opening the Doors: the achievement of Catherine Carswell, (Bibl.); DLB Gale, vol. 36; ECSWW; McCulloch, M. P. (1997) ‘Sexual politis or the poetry of desire: Catherine Carswell’s Life of Robert Burns’, in K. Simpson (ed.) Love and Liberty: Robert Burns: a bicentenary celebration, pp. 289–98; ODNB (2004); Pilditch, J. (2007) Catherine Carswell: a biography; The Scotsman, 26 Feb. 1946 (Appreciation); The Times, 22 Feb. 1946 (obit.).

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CHALMERS CHALMERS, Margaret, baptised Lerwick, Shetland, 12 December 1758, died after 1823. Carer and poet. Daughter of Kitty Irvine, and William Chalmers, customs officer. Margaret Chalmers’s father was already dead when her only brother was killed at the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805, leaving her with substantial debts and responsibility for her blind and bedridden mother and asthmatic sister. In 1813, she published her Poems, but poor editing and long delays impeded its reception. Seizing the ‘Thulian quill’ – her own phrase – she wrote about the Shetland Islands, noting how Shetland’s history was separate from Scotland’s, and commenting on wider contemporary issues, often describing how they affected Lerwick and the islands. She corresponded with Scott 1814–5 and sent him copies of some of her poems. She earned enough from Poems to reduce the debts but not to discharge them. She was refused a government pension in 1808, but received £10 from the Royal Literary Fund in 1816. Alone and in declining health, she appealed for charity in 1823 then disappears from the record: the date of her death is not known. A flight of steps in Lerwick, ‘Miss Chalmers Stairs’ (now demolished), was named after her; and her home at 10 Commercial Street still stands. Margaret Chalmers is one of a number of women poets from humble or straitened backgrounds who developed literary skills, often helped by an educated friend or employer. Their poetry contributed significantly to family income. They share a conviction about their own compositions, invariably identifying the source of their muse. Christian Gray (1772–c. 1830), a farmer’s daughter from Aberdalgie, Perthshire, lost her eyesight in childhood through smallpox. Scripture in particular was read to her and she knitted while walking outside. She composed poetry in Scots and English and memorised it until it could be written down for her. Her published works engage with marriage, slavery, war and religion; she also wrote about her own blindness, aligning herself with Milton, and dealt confidently with the work of Cowper and Ossian. Christian Milne, n. Ross (1772–c. 1816), domestic servant and poet, was born in Inverness, attended a village school in Auchentoul, and began composing songs in childhood. She went into service at the age of 14 and continued to write in secret until she went to work for the wife of Professor Jack, Principal of the University of Aberdeen, who encouraged her writing. She supported her family through extreme poverty, and

University (1993–2004), and senior lecturer at Stirling University (2004–8). She co-authored an anthology (1996), a book (2000), and several journal articles including two on the murder of children (2005, 2007) before her untimely death from cancer. In 2015, her fellow researchers dedicated their latest publication to her, ‘in loving memory of a lifelong friend, fellow researcher, and colleague dedicated to doing research that mattered, in the wider effort to understand violence and to improve the lives of all those affected by it’. RED • Cavanagh, K. and Cree, V. E. (eds) (1996) Working with Men: feminism and social work; Dobash, R. E., Dobash, R. P., Cavanagh, K. and Lewis, R. (2000) Changing Violent Men; Cavanagh, K., Dobash, R. E. and Dobash, R. P. (2005) ‘Men who murder children inside and outside the family’, British Journal of Social Work, 35, pp. 667–88; (2007) ‘The murder of children by fathers in the context of child abuse’, Child Abuse and Neglect, 31, pp. 731–46; Dobash, R. E. and Dobash, R. P. (1979) Violence Against Wives: a case against the patriarchy, (2015) When Men Murder Women; The Guardian, 8 Jan. 2009 (obit.) CEAPAICH, Sileas na see SILEAS NIGHEAN MHIC RAGHNAILL (c. 1660–c. 1729) CHAIMBEUL, Fionnghal, fl. 1645–48. Poet. Daughter of Mary Erskine, grand-daughter of the Earl of Mar, and Dugald Campbell of Auchinbreck. Fionnghal Chaimbeul married Iain Garbh, 7th Maclean of Coll, by whom she had six children, including Hector Roy Maclean. Iain Garbh and Hector Roy fought on the Royalist side at the battle of Inverlochy (1645), in which Fionnghal’s brother, Duncan Campbell of Auchinbreck, leader of the Covenanting forces, was killed. Her only extant composition, ‘Turus mo chreiche ’thug mi ’Chola’ (My journey to Coll was my ruin) is remarkable for her forthright rejection of the clan into which she had married, going as far as to curse her own son while declaring her loyalty to the clan of her birth. Evidence within the poem points to her having been badly treated by the Macleans ­throughout her marriage. Tradition states that Fionnghal Chaimbeul went mad with grief after Inverlochy, and died around 1648. af

• NLS: MS No. 50:2:20; pp. 182a–182b. A Sennachie (1838) Account of the Clan Maclean, pp. 308–9; Sinclair, Rev. A. M. (1904–7) ‘A Collection of Gaelic Poems’, Trans. Gael. Soc. Inverness, 26, pp. 238–40; Stevenson, D. (1980) Alasdair MacColla, p. 160.

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developed consumption, aged 18. She married Peter Milne, a ship’s carpenter, in 1796 and had eight children. Susanna Hawkins (1787–1868), domestic servant and cowherd, was the daughter of John Hawkins, an Ecclefechan blacksmith. The Dumfries Courier began printing volumes of her poems around 1826, larger collections appearing in 1829 and 1838. She became a wandering minstrel in the Borders, selling her own work and seeking out other Dumfriesians. el

refugees, ran a chicken farm during the war, and wrote two series of BBC radio talks. In 1949, Janet Chance destroyed most of her papers. Following her husband’s death, she fell into severe depression and killed herself by jumping out of a window. In a tribute, her long-time colleague Stella Browne commented that ‘In her country’s stark and stormy past, she might have been another “*Black Agnes of Dunbar” ’ (Tributes, 1954). lah • Wellcome Library, London: ALRA and Family Planning Association archives; Library of Congress, Washington DC, and Sophia Smith Collection, Northampton MA: Margaret Sanger papers, corr. Janet and Clinton Chance and Rachel Conrad (their daughter). Chance, J., Works as above. ALRA (1954) Tributes to Janet Chance ; Hindell, K., ‘Stella Browne and Janet Chance’, The Listener, 29 June 1972; ODNB (2004).

• Shetland Archives, D24/12/43, Chalmers. Selected works: Chalmers, M. (1813) Poems; Gray, C. (1808) Tales, Letters and other Pieces in Verse ; Hawkins, S. (1829) Poetical Works; Milne, C. (1805) Simple Poems on Simple Subjects. Blain, V., Clements, P., Grundy, I. (1990) The Feminist Companion to Literature in England (Chalmers, Gray, Milne); ODNB (2004) (Chalmers, Hawkins, Milne). CHALMERS SMITH, Dorothea Chalmers (1872–1944)

see SMITH, Dorothea

CHARTERIS, Catherine Morice (Katie), n. Anderson, born Aberdeen 1837, died Edinburgh 18 Nov. 1918. First President, Church of Scotland Woman’s Guild. Daughter of Rachel Johnston, and Sir Alexander Anderson, Lord Provost of Aberdeen. Katie Anderson was educated at home. In 1863, she married a Church of Scotland minister, Archibald Charteris (1835–1908), Professor of Biblical Criticism at the University of Edinburgh from 1868. In Glasgow and Edinburgh, Katie Charteris organised slum missions, mothers’ meetings, Bible classes, and a scheme of home visitation which, typically for the time, combined philanthropy with social control. From 1870, Archibald Charteris was convener of the Kirk’s Life and Work Committee, which in 1887 proposed the creation of a national Woman’s Guild. Its general object was to unite ‘all women who are engaged in the service of Christ in connection with the Church, or desire to give help to any practical Christian work in the parish’ (Church of Scotland Yearbook 1887, p. 83). The new movement developed fitfully in the face of considerable resistance, but Katie Charteris, as president 1887–1906, brought energy and commitment to its promotion – especially at the annual conferences held around Scotland. She edited the Church of Scotland’s magazine Life & Work Woman’s Guild supplement, bringing the idea to life for thousands of women. She encouraged them to a life of friendship and purposeful action, highlighting the prejudice and injustice that women, working together, might tackle. By 1906, there were over 40,000 members. Katie Charteris also helped initiate and fund a house for missionary

n. Whyte, born Edinburgh 10 Feb. 1886, died London 18 Dec. 1953. Sex educator and reformer, founder of Abortion Law Reform Association (ALRA). Daughter of Jane Elizabeth Barbour, and Rev. Alexander Whyte, Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland. After a conventional and comfortable upbringing in a large and talented family in Edinburgh, in 1912 Janet Whyte married Clinton Chance, a stockbroker, and moved to England. They had three children. Their social circle included many wellknown intellectual and political names of the day. She was noted for her animated and stimulating conversation and was a catalyst in social events, but she suffered intermittently from severe depression. By the mid-1920s, she was deeply involved in the birth control movement and founded a sex education centre in Bow, East London. She commented on the extent of sexual ignorance encountered and in 1931 published The Cost of English Morals, a scathing attack on conventional attitudes. Her other published works were Intellectual Crime (1933) and The Romance of Reality (1934), advancing her rationalist creed, as well as The Case for the Reform of the Abortion Laws (1938), and a contribution to ALRA’s Back Street Surgery (1947). She was one of seven women who in 1936 established ALRA to campaign for the legalisation of safe surgical abortion; she was an active member of the executive and its survival owed much to her generous financial support. She was also active on behalf of Czech CHANCE, Janet,

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children and a rest home for deaconesses. A woman of enthusiasm, intelligence and wit, she made a distinctive and enduring contribution to women’s position within the national church. lo

Women’s Suffrage. With the Earl of Cromer as President and the Countess of Jersey as VicePresident, the NLOWS was strongly patronised by the British aristocracy and, with its journal, the Anti-Suffrage Review, lasted until 1918 and the granting of women’s suffrage. Like her privileged aristocratic contemporaries, *Katherine, Duchess of Atholl, and *Violet Graham, Duchess of Montrose, Lady Griselda Cheape found the enfranchisement of women unthinkable. She was President of the St Andrews Branch of the Scottish National WASL, of which the Duchess of Montrose was President. hc /jsc

• Church of Scotland Yearbook (1887); Life & Work 1891–1919. Gordon, A. (1912) The Life of Archibald Hamilton Charteris; Macdonald, L. Orr (2000) A Unique and Glorious Mission; Magnusson, M. (1987) Out of Silence ; *ODNB (2004) (Bibl.). CHEAPE, Lady Griselda Johanna Helen, n. Ogilvy, born Cortachy, Angus, 20 Dec. 1865, died London 12 Feb. 1934. Anti-suffrage campaigner. Daughter of the Hon. Henrietta Blanche Stanley, and Sir David Graham Drummond Ogilvy, 5th Earl of Airlie. Lady Griselda Ogilvy was the youngest of six children of the Angus family of Ogilvy of Airlie. She married James Cheape of Strathtyrum, St Andrews, on 23 December 1897, a match precipitated, it was said, by her dragging him into a ‘Ladies Only’ railway carriage in Strathmiglo Station. A young niece recalled her as, ‘. . . aweinspiring and handsome, tall with wonderful dark eyebrows and white hair’ (Cheape 1984). While kind and hospitable, she was also considered eccentric and a strict disciplinarian, with firm views on the upbringing of children, particularly her own three. They were terrified of her ‘awful temper’, and were dealt corporal punishment liberally; eccentricities included incubating hundreds of hens’ eggs in her bed (ibid.). Brought up in the county paternalist tradition with a strong sense of duty, she made the nursing of sick children her special interest, enrolling for training in the Sick Children’s Hospital, Edinburgh and the Pendlebury Sick Children’s Home, Manchester. She also helped on the wards in the Royal Infirmary, Dundee, and the London Temperance Hospital. Family tradition suggested that her medical skills and a certain dangerous confidence were acquired as a self-appointed auxiliary nurse in the South African War. She was President of the BWTA, the Open-Air Sanatorium Committee and the Invalid Children’s Committee in St Andrews, and served on the Committee of the ‘Rescue Home’ in Dundee. She is particularly recalled for her leading anti-suffrage role in the Scottish National WASL, founded in 1908, where her platform speeches were said to be so robust and provocative as to cause riots. The WASL amalgamated in 1910 with the Men’s National League for Opposing Women’s Franchise to form the National League for Opposing

• Private collection, Cheape, G., ‘Memoirs of Sarah Markham’ (MS autobiography); Cheape, H. (c. 1984) ‘Lady Griselda Cheape of Strathtyrum’ (MS memoir). The Anti-Suffrage Review, 1908–10; BP (1999) 106th edn., vol I, p. 45; Harrison, B. (1978) Separate Spheres: the opposition to women’s suffrage in Britain; SS; Smitley, M. (2009) The Feminine Public Sphere: middle-class women in civic life in Scotland, c. 1870–1914. CHECKLAND, (Edith) Olive, n. Anthony, born Newcastle 6 June 1920, died Swansea 8 Sept. 2004. Historian. Daughter of Edith Philipson, and Robert Anthony, navy cook. An only child, Olive Anthony became the first graduate in her family, studying geography at the University of Birmingham. There she met and in 1942 married Sydney Checkland (1906–96) who became in 1957 the first Professor of Economic History at the University of Glasgow. In a companionate marriage and a scholarly partnership, she raised five children, first in a garret flat, and later in an official professor’s residence at 5 The University. A diminutive figure with a larger-than-life presence beside her tall but often quieter husband, Olive Checkland was active in departmental work, especially with graduates, providing succour and support to political and academic refugees. She made a significant contribution to history writing, although perhaps under-rated in her lifetime. She co-edited with her husband an edition of The Poor Law Report of 1834 (1974), and with Margaret Lamb Health Care as Social History (1982). A string of monographs included: Philanthropy in Victorian Scotland (1980); Industry and Ethos: Scotland ­1832–1914 (1989), co-written with Sydney; Sobriety and Thrift: John Philipson and Family (1989); Isabella Bird and a woman’s right to do what she can do well (1996), and Japanese Whisky, Scotch Blend (1998). In her books as in her life, she manifested a sense of duty, integrity and liberal freedoms. She

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CHEVERTON CHIESLEY (or CHIESLY), Rachel, Lady Grange, m. Erskine, baptised Edinburgh 4 Feb. 1679, died

wrote histories of pioneering women, philanthropy, health care and moral reform with the feeling and understanding of a bustling campaigner herself, however unfashionable or dated some causes she approved of may have seemed. cgb

Idrigal, Skye, May 1745. Daughter of Margaret Nicholson, and John Chiesley of Dalry. Rachel Chiesley was apparently very beautiful, and in about 1708 James Erskine, Lord Grange (1679–1754), younger brother of John, 11th Earl of Mar, fell in love with her. But her father had assassinated Sir George Lockhart, Lord President of the court of session in 1689 and, fearing for his legal career, James Erskine refused to marry her when she became pregnant, until she threatened him with a pistol. According to her, they then lived together for nearly 25 years ‘in great love and peace’ (NAS, GD124/15/1506). They had four sons and five ­daughters. By 1718, however, her sons’ tutor was complaining of Lady Grange’s imperiousness and unreasonableness. When the young Alexander Carlyle met her, she was so gorgeously dressed that he thought she must be the Great Scarlet Whore of Babylon. (Invited to tea with her daughters, he noted that they seemed frightened out of their wits by her.) When Lady Grange discovered that her husband had a mistress in London, she followed him about, abused him verbally in public, swore at his ­relations, drank excessively and allegedly threatened to reveal that he was a Jacobite. Trying to pacify her, he allowed her to manage his estate, but her extravagance meant he had to replace her. Their grown-up children’s letters recount in painful detail the violent arguments that disturbed the neighbours in Edinburgh’s Cowgate at night. In 1732, intending to confront her husband, Lady Grange booked a seat on the London coach but a party of Highlanders burst into her house, tied her up, gagged her and carried her off to the Highlands, apparently on Grange’s orders. She was taken to the island of Heiskir, then to St Kilda, where she was kept for four years. In 1738 she smuggled out a letter and an expedition set off to rescue her, but she had already been moved elsewhere. She died in 1745, still a prisoner, and was buried at Trumpan, in Waternish, Skye. She was certainly scandalously treated by her husband, but he himself was a victim of the marriage laws of the time, which did not allow him to divorce a partner who had become intolerable not only to him but to his entire family. rkm

• Checkland, O., Works as above, and (1980) Queen Margaret Union 1890–1980, (1989) Britain’s Encounter with Meiji Japan 1868–1912, (1994) Humanitarianism and the Emperor’s Japan 1877–1977. The Herald, 2 Oct. 2004; eODNB (Checkland, Sydney); The Scotsman, 14 Sept. 2004 (obit.). CHEVERTON, Charlotte Mary Rose (Lottie), n. Ramsden, born Ripon, Yorkshire, 16 Jan. 1960,

died Wooler, Northumberland, 17 Sept. 1991. Art teacher, co-founder of Leith School of Art. Daughter of Juliet Ponsonby, and Rt Hon James Ramsden, MP. Charlotte Ramsden, the youngest of five children, was educated in London, then at Marlborough College, where she was inspired to study art by Robin Child. At the Slade School of Art (1978–81) she received a travelling scholarship to study Christian iconography in Cappadocia, an experience which influenced her later work. In 1982, she married Mark Cheverton, artist and teacher, who was appointed Head of Art at Edinburgh Academy. Lottie Cheverton taught at Fettes College and worked with community groups, in 1985 persuading artists from all over Scotland to donate pictures for display in aid of the Third World (‘Art for Africa’, Edinburgh City Art Centre). Her encouragement and concern for budding artists led in 1988 to the foundation by the Chevertons of the Leith School of Art, the central philosophy of which was, and is, to offer a creative environment for personal growth and intellectual awareness. Lottie Cheverton was elected a member of council of the SSA in 1989. The road accident in which Mark and Lottie died in 1991, brought to an untimely end their artistic careers, but the Leith School remains their legacy. The book by Lottie’s brother George (Ramsden 2009) is a unique tribute to their lives and achievements. ems • ‘Freedom within a Framework: The Art and Teaching of Mark and Charlotte Cheverton’, exhibition catalogue, Leith School of Art, August 1992; Ramsden, G. (2009) Leith, Scotland’s Independent Art School, Founders and Followers; The Guardian, 23 Sept. 1991; The Scotsman, 19 Sept. 1991 (obit. and article); The Times; 20 Sept. and 24 Oct. 1991. Private information: Family, and staff of Fettes College and Leith School of Art.

• NRS: Mar and Kellie Muniments, GD124/15/1179, 1374–80, 1506, 1524. Carlyle, A. (1973) Anecdotes and Characters of the Times; Grant, I. F. (1959) The Macleods: The History of a Clan;

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Bishop when church lands were sold or disbursed at about the time of the Reformation. The couple had at least one daughter and a son. Other well-placed bishop’s daughters included Margaret Beaton (fl. 1545–73), illegitimate daughter of Cardinal David Beaton and *Marion Ogilvy. In 1546 Margaret Beaton married David Lindsay (1526/7–74), 10th Earl of Crawford, with a dowry of 4,000 marks, succeeding dowager countess *Katherine Campbell. She had several children. When the marriage broke up in the 1570s, she went to live with her mother. Archbishop Andrew Forman’s illegitimate daughter Jane Forman (fl. 1519–50) received roughly £1,000 when she married Alexander Oliphant of Kellie. sem

Laing, D. (1875) ‘Mrs Erskine, Lady Grange, in the Island of St Kilda’, in Proc. Soc. Antiquaries Scot., 10; Macaulay, M. (2009) The Prisoner of St Kilda; Marshall, R. K. (1983) Virgins and Viragos; ODNB (2004) (see Erskine, Rachel); SetonWatson, R. W. (1931) ‘The Strange Story of Lady Grange’, History, 16. CHILTON, Margaret Isabel, born Clifton, Bristol 17 Feb. 1875, died Edinburgh 25 June 1963. Stained glass artist. Daughter of Isabella Todd, and George Chilton, solicitor. The youngest of seven, Margaret Chilton studied at the Royal College of Art with stained glass specialists Christopher Whall and Alfred Dury, and designed her first window in 1907. She spent most of her later working life in Scotland from 1918, teaching at both GSA and ECA, where she was Head of Design from 1926. In 1922, Margaret Chilton set up studio in Edinburgh with her former Glasgow pupil Marjorie Boyce Kemp (1885–1975), who was born in Blairgowrie, the daughter of a Church of Scotland minister, and had attended Easdaile School, Edinburgh, from an early age. They designed separately, adhering to Arts and Crafts principles, but worked as a team to make many stained-glass windows, commissioned all over the UK, as well as in New Zealand, Canada and South America. A large number are in eastern Scotland: works of particular note include the Weatherhead memorial window in the Chalmers Church, Port Seton, as well as the many windows by both artists in Edinburgh City Chambers. KES

• Cockburn, J. H. (1959) The Medieval Bishops of Dunblane ; MacKenzie, A. (1891) History of the Chisholms, pp. 195, 225; Mahoney, M. (1962) ‘The Scottish Hierarchy 1513–1565’, in D. McRoberts (ed.) Essays on the Scottish Reformation 1513– 1625, pp. 60–1; SP, iii, pp. 29–30, vi, p. 546; Sanderson, M. H. B. (1987) Mary Stewart’s People, pp. 7, 11–12, 17–18. CHISHOLM, Mairi Lambert Gooden, of Chisholm,

born Datchet, Bucks., 26 Feb. 1896, died Perth 22 August 1981. Ambulance driver and photographer. Daughter of Margaret Fraser, and Roderick Chisholm, chief of Clan Chisholm. Through a shared love of motorcycles, Mairi Chisholm met (Elizabeth) Elsie Knocker (1884–1978), a trained nurse. In 1914, both women volunteered, initially as dispatch riders, and went with Hector Munro’s Flying Ambulance Column (FAC) to Belgium. They drove ambulances until, chafing under the FAC, they persuaded the Belgian authorities to let them set up a front-line first-aid post in a cellar at Pervyse near Ypres. The only women allowed to work on the Western Front, they had realised that casualties needed immediate treatment in order to survive further transport. They gave thousands of wounded men first aid, then Mairi Chisholm drove them to hospital by ambulance. As the famous ‘two women of Pervyse’, both were made Chevalier of the Order of Leopold, and later awarded the Military Medal. Both women were gassed, Mairi Chisholm twice, and invalided home in 1918. They were assiduous photographers: their combined collection, running to hundreds of images, makes them ‘two of the most important documentarists’ of the First World War (Williams 1991, p. 33). Mairi Chisholm’s Pervyse albums are in the NLS. After 1918, the two women parted company. Mairi Chisholm, her health affected, moved to Scotland and ran a poultry farm with

• Cormack, P. (1985) Women Stained Glass Artists of the Arts and Crafts Movement exhibition catalogue; Davies, H. (2010) ‘Margaret Isobel Chilton’, Journal of Stained Glass, xxx, pp. 129–39. CHISHOLM, Jane (Jean), fl. 1542–57. Illegitimate daughter of a lady of the Montrose family, and William Chisholm, Bishop of Dunblane. In pre-Reformation Scotland, it was not uncommon for bishops to have illegitimate children. Significant money was paid to find suitable positions or marriages for them. Jane Chisholm was one of four of William Chisholm’s offspring. In 1542, she married Sir James Stirling of Keir (d. 1588), whose previous marriage to Janet Stirling, heiress of Cadder, had been annulled and its issue made illegitimate. Janet Stirling had signed away her birthright and lands to her former husband. When Jane Chisholm married James Stirling, she brought a dowry of £1,000, and through her, James acquired yet more land and property from the

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companion May Davidson in Cantray, before relocating to Connel, Argyll. She retained her love of motoring, and also established the Clan Chisholm society in 1972. She featured in a BBC TV programme, Yesterday’s Witness (1977), and an IWM exhibition, ‘Women and War’ (2003–4). SR

a once-marshy hollow at Cowden into a traditional Japanese garden, her Shah-rak-uen or ‘place of pleasure and delight’.  She maintained the garden with the help of her devoted Japanese gardener Shinzaburo Matsuo, who is buried next to the Christie family memorial in Muckhart churchyard.  The garden survived for a time after Ella’s death in 1949, but was badly vandalised in the 1960s following the demolition of Cowden Castle, and largely forgotten.  Since 2008, however, the garden has been undergoing a major restoration, overseen by Ella’s great-great-niece Sara Stewart and Professor Masao Fukuhara of Osaka University. The garden will be open to the public from April 2018.  Ella Christie was made FRGS and FSAScot. chd

• NLS: Acc. 8006 (1–5): Five albums of photographs and news cuttings; IWM, unpub. memoir, diaries and corr.; film and audio records of both women. Adie, K. (2003) Corsets to Camouflage; Atkinson, D. (2009) Elsie and Mairi Go to War: two extraordinary women on the Western Front; Condell, D. and Liddiard, J. (1987) Working for Victory; ODNB (2004) (see Chisholm, Mairi; T’Serclaes, Elizabeth); Williams, V. (1991) The Other Observers.

born Cockpen, Edinburgh 21 April 1861, died Edinburgh 29 Jan. 1949. Traveller, gardener, landowner. Daughter of Alison Philp, and John Christie, coalmine-owner. Four years after Ella Christie was born, her father acquired the estate of Cowden in the Ochil hills, where she was raised and educated with her younger sister Alice, spending winters in Edinburgh. From the 1870s, the two girls travelled throughout Europe with their father – to Italy, Spain, Germany and the Low Countries. After her sister’s marriage and her mother’s death, Ella Christie continued to travel, first with her father and later with a friend, to Egypt, Palestine and Syria, and to write about her journeys. Freed of domestic responsibilities after John Christie’s death in 1902, her journeys became ever more wide-ranging and ambitious, taking her to India and Tibet in 1904, to China and Japan in 1907, to Central Asia on two separate journeys in 1910 and 1912, and to America in 1914. In 1916 she became ‘directrice’ of a canteen called ‘La Goutte de Café’, established by the French Red Cross at Bar-sur-Aube, and staffed by five Scotswomen during the Battle of Verdun. In 1917 she returned to Cowden but went back to France in 1918–19 to take charge of another canteen, at Mulhouse in Alsace. She then resumed her travels and her role as the mistress of Cowden Castle where she created what, in its time, was regarded as one of the best Japanese gardens in the western hemisphere. Inspired by her exploration of Japan in 1907, during which she met and visited gardens with the writer Florence Du Cane and her sister, illustrator Ella Du Cane, she employed a Japanese woman, garden designer Taki Handa from the school of garden design at Nagoya, to transform

• NLS: Acc. 5058 : Stewart Christie Papers.  Christie, E. (1925) Through Khiva to Golden Samarkand, (n. d.) A Japanese Garden in Perthshire; with Stewart, A. (1940) A Long Look at Life. Du Cane, E. and F. (1908) The Flowers and Gardens of Japan; ODNB (2004); Pearse, B. (1991) Companion to Japanese Britain and Ireland; Stewart, A. (1955) ‘Alicella’: A Memoir of Alice King Stewart and Ella Christie; Swan, A. (1989) ‘Where the Ochils met the Orient’, The Scots Magazine, vol. 132, no. 1; http://www.cowdencastle.com

CHRISTIE, Isabella Robertson (Ella),

m. Walker, born Edinburgh 18 Jan. 1904, died London 1 Feb. 1996. Actor and singer. Daughter of Wilhelmina Duncan, and Henry Reid Christie, brewery agent. Following her education at George Watson’s Ladies’ College, Edinburgh, Madeleine Christie studied singing at the Central School in London. While there, she was offered the chance of a lifetime, understudying the part of Polly Peachum in The Beggar’s Opera, with a place in the chorus; but her father, confusing an opera chorus with the variety stage, ordered her home. In 1926, she married David Walker, a lawyer, and moved to Glasgow, raising two children and undertaking amateur work. Her first professional engagement was in 1944 with Glasgow’s Park Theatre, following which she joined the Wilson Barrett Company, playing repertory in Glasgow, Edinburgh and Aberdeen. Five years later she moved to the Glasgow Citizens’ Theatre. She played in several roles at the Edinburgh Festival, including ‘Sensualitie’ in Tyrone Guthrie’s production of The Thrie Estaitis: later, extensive work for Guthrie took her to Broadway and a tour of North America. Her theatre credits are numerous, and among her films were Conspiracy of Hearts, Brotherly Love and Florence Nightingale. In broadcasting she ranged

CHRISTIE, Madeleine Elsie Jane,

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from Mrs Dale’s Diary on radio to The Pallisers on television, and was proud to have played the principal role in J. M. Barrie’s The Old Lady Shows Her Medals, the first play televised from Scotland (19 March 1952). Aged 89, her final engagement was as Sister Godric in the television production Body and Soul. dpw

• Clapperton, J. H., Works as above. Cheadle, T. (2018) Sexual Progressives: reimagining intimacy in Scotland, 1880–1914; Crawford, E. (2001) ‘Jane Hume Clapperton’ in WSM; ODNB (2004). ‘Clarinda’ see MCLEHOSE (or Maclehose, M’Lehose), Agnes (1758–1841)

• Personal information (son).

CLARK, Elizabeth Thomson (Betty) [Joan Ure], n. Carswell, born Newcastle upon Tyne 22 June 1918,

CLANRANALD, Margaret, Lady see MACLEOD, Margaret, Lady Clanranald (b. before 1720,

died Mauchline, 24 Feb. 1978. Playwright and poet. Daughter of Janet Love Thomson, clerkess, and John Carswell, engineering draughtsman. Betty Carswell grew up in Wallsend on Tyne. From age 12 she cared for her father and siblings when her mother (from Greenock) contracted tuberculosis and became a permanent invalid. Betty Carswell left school early and worked as a typist before marrying John Lochhead Clark (b. 1912/13), an accountant and Glasgow businessman. They had one daughter and lived in Glasgow’s West End. Betty Clark herself contracted tuberculosis aged 29 and while in hospital began to write, later joining Edward Scoular’s creative writing class at Langside College. Her initial interest was in poetry, but she turned to playwriting, using the nom de plume Joan Ure to distance her identity as a writer from that of wife and mother: Joan was the name of her late sister. ‘Joan Ure’ was never a popular dramatist; few of her plays were performed professionally and many were never staged. Productions were mostly by fringe groups, notably Glasgow University Arts Theatre Group and the short-lived Stage Company (Scotland), in whose creation she played a major role. Several of her stage plays were however produced for radio by Stewart Conn. She was also a co-founder of the Scottish Society of Playwrights. Her first theatre production was Punctuated Rhythms for the Falcon Theatre in Glasgow in 1962. The Arts Theatre’s productions included Suburban Commentaries (1964), Nothing May Come of it: a revue (1965), In this Space in Three by Three (1966), and Seven Characters Out of ‘The Dream’ (1968). I See Myself as this Young Girl was the first play by a Scot to be produced at the Close Theatre in Glasgow (1967). Her best-known pieces are Something in it for Ophelia and Something in it for Cordelia, both produced at the Edinburgh Fringe in 1971. She has been described as ‘beautiful if painfully thin . . . exquisitely if eccentrically dressed, wholly self-absorbed and unfailingly manipulative’ (McDonald 2002). In his appreciation of her

d. 1780)

CLAPPERTON, Jane Hume, born

Edinburgh 22 Sept. 1832, died Edinburgh 30 Sept. 1914. Philosopher, social reformer and birth control pioneer. One of twelve children of Anne Hume, and Alexander Clapperton, merchant. Her mother’s death in 1872 released Jane Clapperton from life as a ‘daughter at home’ engaged in the usual occupations of district visiting and Sunday school teaching. Influenced by the writings of George Eliot and a new-found agnosticism, she was now free to develop theories of social reform, which she published as Scientific Meliorism and the Evolution of Happiness (1885). Another work, a novel, Margaret Dunsmore: or a socialist home (1888), shows how co-operative living might be put into practice. Jane Clapperton defined ‘Meliorism’, utilitarianism allied to social evolution, as ‘the gradual improvement of individuals – the creation of a superior race whose spontaneous impulses will construct and support an improved and improving social system’. She was concerned with the position of women, disapproving of marriage as an institution and arguing for greater freedom in sexual relations. ‘The point of grave importance for us is, that under the fair surface of a decorous married life, there exists in this country in hundreds and thousands of cases, a vacuum, I mean a space empty and void of real, substantial happiness.’ (Clapperton 1885, p. 157). Her books did not sell well, the original editions now being virtually unobtainable. In the 1880s Jane Clapperton was a member of the London-based Men and Women’s Club, which debated relations between the sexes and supported the anarchist Legitimation League. She was an active suffragist over many years, joining the EWSS in 1871 and, briefly in 1907, the WSPU, before settling as a member of the WFL. For that society she acted as a hostess at the Café Vegetaria ‘At Home’ in Edinburgh in Dec. 1909. EC r 89

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life, Christopher Small celebrated dramas that are ‘delicate, allusive and full of wit’, and recorded her as declaring: ‘in Scotland the battle of the sexes is a war where everybody has lost’ (Glasgow Herald 1978). AS

becoming known as ‘Mr and Mrs Glasgow’. Their rapport with their public was honed over the years, certain sketches becoming favourites. They appeared in the first Scottish Royal Variety Performance and were later honoured with the BEM for services to entertainment. Colin Murray died in 1989. fb

• Univ. of Glasgow Library Scottish Theatre Archive, Special Collections Department: unpublished scripts, poems, letters, articles and occasional pieces, including Gray’s radio transcript. Ure, J., Works as above, and (1970) Two Plays, (1979) Five Short Plays (ed. C. Small). Gray, A. (1985) ‘Portrait of a playwright’, in J. Kelman, A. Owens and A. Gray, Lean Tales; Glasgow Herald, 25 Feb. 1978 (obit.); McDonald, J. (2002) ‘‘‘Is it not possible to have a poem made out of theatre?’’: . . . dramas and dramaturgy of Joan Ure’, Int. Jour. Scot. Theatre, 3.1, June; ODNB (2004).

• Bruce, F. (2000) Scottish Showbusiness; Mackie, A. D. (1973) The Scotch Comedians; The Scotsman, 8 May 1995 (obit.).

n. Macpherson, born Laggan c. 1740, died Perth c. 1815. Poet. Daughter of Ewen Macpherson, schoolmaster. Known as Bean T(h)orra Dhamh (the goodwife of Torra Damh) in Badenoch where she lived after her marriage, Mary Clark probably composed many more poems than the seven that survive. Widowed young, she moved in later life to stay with a married daughter in Perth. She is an early representative of the Evangelical Revival that swept through Gaelic Presbyterianism, especially after the New Testament was published in 1767. The movement formalised ideas of social justice, protesting against bad landlordism and opening new perspectives on traditional loyalties bonding chief and clan. Mary Clark’s poetry is clear and direct, her expression of Christian faith as forthright as her comments on secular life, but it is her explicit criticism of the idea of a Gaelic Golden Age that is startlingly fresh. The leaders of that society ‘placed their foot on the rule of Truth/. . . harnessing the poor and wounding them with malice’. jm ac i

CLARK, Mary,

CLARK, Grace, m. Murray, born Yoker, Glasgow, 29 June 1905, died Ayr 6 May 1995. Entertainer and comedienne. Daughter of Margaret Nelson, and Alexander Clark, ship plater. Having started out in showbusiness as a concert pianist, Grace Clark met her husband Colin Murray, a singer, during a summer season in Dunbar in 1926. They formed a double act, Clark and Murray, and married in 1931 but did not turn to comedy until after the Second World War. Scottish ‘comediennes’ (as they were known) were not numerous in the variety era. Two of Grace Clark’s best-known predecessors were also in double-acts, Dora Lindsay and Bret Harte, and Doris and Frank Droy. In comedic tradition, they all exploited the dramatic possibilities of ‘closemooth’ Glasgow working-class speech. Lindsay and Harte, active in Scotland in the first part of the 20th century, specialised in playing on a contrast between Dora ‘the wee shawlie . . . with a mouthful of rhyming slang’, and Bret ‘the would-be Kelvinsider’ (Mackie 1973, p. 101). Doris Droy (n. Bell, born c. 1905), who started out as a dancer, was associated with long-running pantomimes at Glasgow’s Queen’s Theatre in the 1930s and 40s and with her ‘Suicide Sal’ character in a 1939 revue of that name, a femme fatale who dismisses a boxer with the following: ‘He thought that he was strong and sturdy; After I had left him, well, he≈wasnae worth a curdie’ (small coin) (Bruce, p. 116). Grace Clark and Colin Murray specialised in the arguing husband and wife domestic comedy that was a staple of variety theatre and vaudeville. They gave the act a distinctive Scottish flavour,

• MacRae, A. (ed.) (n.d.) Mary MacPherson, Bean Torra Dhamh, the Religious Poetess of Badenoch, her Poems and Life ; Rose, J. (ed.) (1851) Metrical Reliques of ‘The Men’ in the Highlands; Sinton, Rev. T. (1906) The Poetry of Badenoch.

died Lanark, April 1625. Pious laywoman. Bessie Clarkson was a woman of religious conviction whose story was publicised by her Presbyterian minister, William Livingston of the parish of Lanark. For three and a half years, until her death, she was counselled by him; he referred to her as ‘this deare daughter of Abraham’. She is a case study of Puritanism’s culture of alienation and guilt, being obsessed with the wrath of God ‘that you [Livingston] preached’. Her minister countered that her feelings were actually constructive and beneficial, but she died without surmounting her despair, although she raised eyes and hands heavenward at the end, to his c­ ontentment. William

CLARKSON, Bessie,

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born Glasgow 19 Sept. 1827, died Ardrossan 5 June 1888. Philanthropist. Daughter of Mary Mackenzie, and John Clugston, merchant. Beatrice Clugston’s childhood illness stimulated her lifelong sympathy towards the sick. She never married; like many other Victorian middleclass women she devoted her life to philanthropic work. For a period the family lived at Larkhall, Lanarkshire, then, following her father’s death in 1855, moved back to Glasgow. Around this time she became a prison visitor and later began visiting patients at the Glasgow Royal Infirmary. In 1864, she founded a Dorcas Society (a group who made clothes and provided small sums of money) to help discharged patients. Conscious that returning impoverished patients to a poor domestic environment significantly impeded their recovery, in 1865 she established the Glasgow Convalescent Home at Bothwell, Lanarkshire, the first such institution in the West of Scotland. Beatrice Clugston was a prodigious fundraiser, soliciting support from all sections of society, including royalty such as *Princess Louise. It took her only one year to raise sufficient funds for a second convalescent home, the West of Scotland Seaside Convalescent Homes, opened at Dunoon in 1869 and the largest in Scotland with 250 beds. In 1871, following further fundraising, she began the relocation of the Glasgow Convalescent Home to a new, far larger building at Lenzie. She went on to found the Broomhill Homes for Incurables at Kirkintilloch in 1876. She wrote numerous pamphlets to promote her charitable work. In her later years, a fund was raised to provide her with an annuity in recognition of her work. A monument was erected to Beatrice Clugston in 1891 in the Auld Aisle Cemetery, Kirkintilloch. jlc

Livingston’s account of her was first circulated without his permission, probably in manuscript, and then in 1631 in printed form at his own bidding. The popularity of her story is demonstrated by its reprinting four times between 1664 and 1698. dm

CLUGSTON, Beatrice,

• Livingston, W. (1631) The Conflict in Conscience of a deare Christian, named Bessie Clarksone ; Mullan, D. G. (2000) Scottish Puritanism 1590–1638. CLEGHORN, Louisa born c. 1720, died after 1775. Sick-nurse, Edinburgh. Louisa Cleghorn married Archibald Russell, weaver, in the Canongate, Edinburgh, in 1739. In a court case of 1775, when she was about 55 years old, she stated that it was her business to wait upon sick persons. In this instance she had nursed the widow of a man who had died of a fever, the widow eventually being put in the tolbooth ‘delirious’ (Edin. Comm. Court Processes). Her statement shows that women saw sick-nursing as continuous employment. It was work in which women with little education or employment skills could earn some money towards the upkeep of the household. ecs

• NRS: CC8/4/644 Edinburgh Commissary Court Processes. Grant, F. J. (ed.) (1915) Parish of Holyroodhouse or Canongate Register of Marriages, 1564–1800; WWEE (Bibl.).

born Edinburgh 18 June 1830, died Melrose 19 Feb. 1869. Hymn writer. Daughter of Anna Maria Douglas, of an army family, and Andrew Clephane, Sheriff of Fife and Kinross. Elizabeth Clephane’s family moved to Melrose, where she became noted for her philanthropy and good work among the poor, selling her horses to provide money for poor relief. After her death, eight of her hymns appeared in The Family Treasury, a religious magazine, between 1872 and 1874, under the heading ‘Breathings on the Border’. Two of them became famous, and are still to be found in many hymn books: ‘Beneath the Cross of Jesus’ (published 1872), and ‘There were ninety and nine that safely lay’ (published 1874). The latter, made famous by the American evangelist Ira D. Sankey, is said to have been written after the early death in Canada of her oldest brother George, the ne’er do well of the family. A memorial brass to her is in Melrose Corn Exchange. jrw

CLEPHANE, Elizabeth Cecilia,

• Clugston, B. (1871) West of Scotland Convalescent Seaside Homes, Dunoon. A short account of their present position and capabilities of extension and use. Blackie, W. G. (1875) Miss Clugston and her Work; Checkland, O. (1980) Philanthropy in Victorian Scotland; Cronin, J. (2003) ‘The origin and development of Scottish convalescent homes’ PhD, Univ. of Glasgow; ODNB (2004); Stewart, E. L. ‘The incurable Miss Clugston’, Glasgow Herald, 15 Dec. 1964.

born Glasgow 10 August 1876, died Dundee 29 Dec. 1968. Suffragette, teacher, town councillor. Daughter of Elsie Melvin, and Hugh Clunas, dress shop ­proprietor.

CLUNAS, Maggie Eliza (Lila),

• CDH; Grant, F. (1944) The Faculty of Advocates in Scotland 1532–1943; Julian, J. (1892, 1907) A Dictionary of Hymnology; Thomson, D. P. (1946) The Sweet Singer of Melrose. Additional information: Alison Robertson.

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Educated at Bell Baxter High School, Cupar, and Moray House Teacher Training College, Edinburgh, Lila Clunas taught in Brown Street elementary public school, Dundee. A socialist, she joined the WSPU in 1906, moving to the WFL the following year and serving as branch secretary from 1908 to 1912. Both her sisters, Elsie and Jessie Clunas, were members; Elsie was the treasurer. Lila Clunas was active in deputations and heckling and writing to the press, where she showed a sharp wit: ‘In this country in the past men have defied the law, and today their names are revered’, she pointed out (Advertiser 1913). In 1908, she was forcibly ejected from one of Churchill’s election meetings; in 1909, on a WFL deputation to Downing Street, she was arrested and charged with obstruction for attempting to present their petition. She was sentenced to three weeks, went on hunger strike and was released early. In 1914, her ejection from a Ramsay MacDonald meeting caused a split between suffrage campaigners and the local Labour Party. The second half of Lila Clunas’s life was spent living with her sister Elsie in Broughty Ferry. In 1943, she was elected to Dundee Town Council as a Labour Party councillor and served until 1964; her interests were in education, libraries and parks. A vegetarian, she was described as a quiet, small, kindly person, but ‘apt to surprise her male colleagues with her logic and eloquence’ (Courier & Advertiser 1968). imh

Glencarron in Wester Ross, where her deerstalking reputation was built. Lady Evelyn’s first expedition, probably in 1911, is described in her Wayfarers in the Libyan Desert (1912) in which her sympathy with Islam is clear. Though there was no formal conversion, in 1933 she decided to undertake the hajj, the pilgrimage to Mecca required of all Muslims at least once, and was the first recorded British woman to do so. With permission from King Ibn Saud of Saudi Arabia, she travelled first to Medina, and then, dressed as a Muslim pilgrim and with personal guides, to Mecca, where she performed the rituals of the hajj. The well-received Pilgrimage to Mecca (1934) gives an account of her experience, which is deeply spiritual, drawing on Islamic history and theology and including sympathetic accounts of the women in the households she visited. Her funeral on the Glencarron estate was attended by both a piper and an imam. JR • Cobbold, E., Works as above. Facey, W. and Taylor, M. (2008) ‘Introduction: from Mayfair to Mecca – the life of Lady Evelyn Cobbold’, in Facey and Taylor (eds) Pilgrimage to Mecca (Bibl.); eODNB. COBLAITH, born probably Skye, died 690. Daughter of Cano mac Gartnait (d. 688), probable leader/ king in Skye. We know nothing of Coblaith ingen Canonn aside from the year of her death and a few tantalising references to her family, which the sources associate with Skye. Her family, under the leadership of her father Cano and her brother Conamail, became one of the highest-profile kindreds in Dál Riata during her lifetime. There are almost no references to Dalriadic royal or noble women in the sources, and notice of Coblaith’s death in 690, just two years after her father’s premature death, is therefore remarkable. This suggests that she was a particularly notable figure, possibly as a result of a high-profile political marriage, or else as a prominent ­ecclesiastic. jef

• Dundee Local Studies Library: press cuttings; Dundee Advertiser, 29 April 1913; Dundee Courier & Advertiser 31 Dec. 1968 (obit.); DWT; Watson, N. (1997) Daughters of Dundee; WSM.

n. Murray, born Edinburgh 17 July 1867, died Inverness 25 Jan. 1963. Muslim convert, traveller, deerstalker and writer. Daughter of Lady Gertrude Coke, and Charles Adolphus Murray, 7th Earl of Dunmore, explorer and son of *Catherine Murray. After Lady Evelyn’s father went bankrupt in 1868, the family led a peripatetic life, as often in North Africa as in Scotland. Later she recalled learning to speak Arabic in a villa outside Algiers: ‘unconsciously I was a little Moslem at heart’ (Cobbold 1934, p. 89). In 1891 she married John Dupuis Cobbold (1861–1929), a Suffolk brewer, and began married life near Ipswich; the couple had three children. The relationship gradually deteriorated, ending in formal separation in 1922, when she received a generous settlement and the estate of

COBBOLD, Lady Evelyn,

• MacAirt, S. and MacNiocaill, G. (1983) The Annals of Ulster (to ad 1131). COCKBURN, Alison n. Rutherford, born Fairnilee, Selkirkshire, 8 Oct. 1713, died Edinburgh, 22 Nov. 1794. Songwriter, literary hostess. Daughter of Alison Ker, and Robert Rutherford. Alison Rutherford was one of six children. Her mother died when she was ten, but by her own account her sisters loved and taught her well. In 1731, she married the advocate, Patrick Cockburn

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eccentric. Daughter of Jane Warburton, and John Campbell, 2nd Duke of Argyll. Lady Mary Campbell was temperamental, poorly educated and indulged in her youth: she appears as a lively, precocious child in Walter Scott’s The Heart of Midlothian. Married to the ‘odious’ Edward Coke (1719–53), son of the Earl of Leicester, she was a virtual prisoner until her mother obtained a writ of habeas corpus. Having divorced him, she obtained her jointure of £2,500 a year on his death in 1753. She was attached to the Duke of York, younger brother of George III: some rumours suggested they secretly married. Best known as an indefatigable journal writer, mixing with the London elite, her comments on contemporaries were trenchant and acerbic. She operated within the political culture of the day, in which women used their influence in parliamentary politics, seeking positions for friends and family, and where ‘gossip’ was linked to power. Politically knowledgeable, active within the Scottish aristocracy, though rarely in Scotland, she took a vigorous interest in the Douglas Cause against the Hamiltons (see Gunning, Elizabeth), despite an ‘aversion’ to ‘Scotchmen’ (Journals 1886–96). Often vocal, against the French she was ‘wild & possessed’. Horace Walpole fondly memorialised her in his Castle of Otranto (1766): ‘No; never was thy pitying breast/Insensible to human woes;/Tender, tho’ firm, it melts distrest/For weakness it never knows’. Lady Mary travelled widely. It is said that, ‘Eccentric to the end, she slept in a dresser drawer in old age, and died sitting upright wearing a high crowned beaver hat adorned with plumes.’ (Holkham Hall website). *Lady Louisa Stuart (1863) described her at 82 as ‘still as violent & absurd as ever’, with a taste for ‘loo, gossip and gardening, but the greatest of these is gossip’. She was buried in the Argyll vault in Westminster Abbey. dls

(d. 1753), who became Commissioner for the estates of the Duke of Hamilton. After his death, Alison Cockburn lived mainly in Edinburgh. Her only son, Adam, was born in 1732 and became a captain of dragoons, but died in tragic circumstances in 1780. She is perhaps most famous for her song, ‘I’ve Seen the Smiling of Fortune Beguiling’, to the old Scottish air, ‘The Flowers of the Forest’, first published in The Lark, Edinburgh 1765 (see Elliot, Jean). She also wrote several songs concerning the Jacobite rising of 1745 but, like other upper-class women of her period, she feared print. Alison Cockburn was related to Sir Walter Scott, who admired her, and she was for many years the centre of a distinguished social circle in Edinburgh, being celebrated for her wit and her beauty: her auburn hair apparently survived without artificial aid into old age. Her account of her life, written in 1784 when she was over 70 and dedicated to Rev. Robert Douglas of Galashiels, her usual correspondent, was circulated privately. It remained unprinted until 1900 when it was published by T. Craig-Brown with other texts, giving a notion of her intellectual interests and her social circle, which included David Hume and James Burnett, Lord Monboddo. She wrote to Hume as an intellectual equal and teased him on his atheism. Her letters and the replies circulated among a select group during her lifetime. The moving directness of her autobiography is made possible by its having private rather than public circulation: for example, the convincing, because unembellished, expression of the physical and emotional ties of married love in her account of comforting her dying husband: ‘Mr. Cockburn, on whom were the sweats of death, begged me to lie down with him . . . I stripped instantly and was embraced in his cold wet arms with such affection, dearer than the first embrace’ (ibid., p. 9). Her will shows her attentive to all those friends, family and servants who had loved her throughout her life and comforted her in her tragic losses of husband and child. DAM c M • NRS: GD247/194–243; GD110; NLS: MSS 915, 3188; Edinburgh Univ. Library: La.II.81/2: letters and literary mss. Rutherford or Cockburn, A. [1784] (1900) Letters and Memoir of Her Own Life; also ‘Felix’, a Biographical Sketch and Various Songs, T. Craig-Brown, ed.; ODNB (2004). Alison Cockburn’s will is at www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk

• Coke, Lady M., (1889–96 edn.) The Letters and Journals of Lady Mary Coke (1766–74). DBAWW; ODNB (2004); Scott, Sir W. (1982 edn.) The Heart of Midlothian, pp. 387–8; Stuart, Lady L. (1863) Some Account of John Duke of Argyll and his Family, (reprinted in Coke’s Journals, 1889–96 edition); Walpole, H. (1766) The Castle of Otranto; Website Holkham Hall and Estate, North Norfolk, for family tree: http://www.holkham.co.uk/ family/1stearl2ndcreation.html

n. Campbell, born probably at Inveraray Castle 6 Feb. 1726, died Morton House, Chiswick, 30 Sept. 1811. Journal and letter writer,

COLLACE, Katharine, Mistress Ross, born Edinburgh c. 1635, died Edinburgh 10 July 1697. Spiritual memoirist, covenanter.

COKE, Lady Mary,

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politics in early-14th-century Scotland imposed on high-born women and, by contrast, the ways in which they might express political convictions usually associated with their male kin. At an early age, Agnes Comyn was married to Malise II, Earl of Strathearn (1261–1317), supporter of the Balliol faction during the unsettled years 1291–6. The marriage, a victory for the Comyn family, created a firm alliance between a native magnate of high standing in national affairs and a political party determined to counter Bruce opposition to the Balliol kingship. At first the alliance worked well; Malise participated in uprisings against Edward I, joining the expedition that raided south as far as Carlisle in spring 1296, and supporting William Wallace and Sir Andrew Murray. In 1306, however, following his victory at the battle of Methven, Robert Bruce compelled Malise to abandon his loyalty to the Balliol-Comyn group. For this offence, Edward I seized Malise and sent him into captivity in England. Countess Agnes spent several years there with him and, although her confinement was honourable, material conditions were both modest and severe. They were not permitted to return to Scotland until after November 1308. Chastened, Malise remained thereafter an adherent of the proEnglish party, but Agnes supported the Comyn-led faction’s efforts to oust Robert Bruce. She became actively involved in the dangerous Soules conspiracy of 1320 to restore the Balliol family to the throne and to secure the return of Comyn and other lands forfeited from his political opponents by Bruce after Bannockburn. She was convicted of complicity in the plot and, although her rank and family connections enabled her to escape execution, she was sentenced to perpetual imprisonment. cjn

Daughter of Marion Muirhead, and Francis Collace, minister. Katharine Collace was one of five sisters brought up in a minister’s household in the parish of Gordon, Earlston presbytery, and educated in Edinburgh. In 1650, aged 15, she entered into a marriage with John Ross of Ross-shire. The marriage, although it produced twelve children, was a disaster: ‘twenty-four years’ grievous afflictions’. Something about the relationship may be gleaned from the Diary of Alexander Brodie of Brodie, but she herself makes scarcely any mention of the vicissitudes of her marital state, calling into question the accuracy of her memoirs, which were published posthumously. Katharine Collace underwent a conversion experience in her fourteenth year, and while sorely tempted to leave the life of evangelical Presbyterian piety, she persevered and praised God for his goodness to her. She was helped by the ministrations of ministers, especially Thomas Hog, a Protester who was deprived in 1662, and later chaplain to William of Orange. Katharine Collace lived in Ross, Moray, Fife and Edinburgh and worked as a schoolmistress, teaching sewing and piety to her students. She read puritan divinity, noting Thomas Shephard and Samuel Rutherford in her life writing. Among her Fife pupils was the child covenanting prophet Emilia Geddie (1665–81) and she collected many of the child’s sayings which were later published in 1717. None of Katharine Collace’s own children outlived her. Her date of death is supplied by her sister Jean Collace (c. 1640–c. 1705), another spiritual memoirist, in ‘Some short Remembrances of the Lord’s kindness to me and his Work on my Soul, for my own use’. DM • NLS: Advocates MS 32.4.4, MS 34.5.19, Wodrow MSS, Octavo xxxi. Colace, C. (1735) Memoirs or Spiritual Exercises of Mistress Ross. Hogg, J. (1717) Choice Sentences and Practices of Emilia Geddie, Daughter to John Geddie; Mullan, D. G. (ed.) (2003) Women’s Life Writing in Early Modern Scotland: writing the evangelical self, c. 1670–c. 1730; Mullan, D. G. (2010) Narratives of the Religious Self in Early-Modern Scotland; ODNB (2004) (Katherine [née Collace] Ross; Emilia Geddie).

• Bain, J. (ed.) (1887) Calendar of Documents relating to Scotland, vol. 3; Macpherson, D. et al. (eds) (1814–19) Rotuli Scotiae in turri Londinensi . . . 2 vols; Maxwell, H. (ed.) (1907) Scalacronica by Sir Thomas Gray of Heton, Knight; Neville, C. J. (2006) Native Lordship in Medieval Scotland: the Earldoms of Strathearn and Lennox c. 1140–1386; Riley, H. T. (ed.) (1865) Willelmi Rishanger . . . Chronica et Annales; Skene, W. F. (ed.) (1871) Johannis de Fordun Gesta Annalia. COMYN, Marjory, Countess of Dunbar, fl. 1290s. Daughter of Elizabeth de Quincy, and Alexander Comyn, Earl of Buchan. Marjory Comyn’s life, like that of her sister *Agnes Comyn, Countess of Strathearn, shows clearly how the so-called Wars of Independence divided the personal and political lives of the ­nobility.

fl. 1296–1320. Daughter of Elizabeth de Quincy, and Alexander Comyn, Earl of Buchan. Agnes Comyn’s life, like that of her sister *Marjory Comyn, Countess of Dunbar, demonstrates both the constraints that matrimonial

COMYN, Agnes, Countess of Strathearn,

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By spring 1296, Marjory’s husband, Patrick, Earl of Dunbar (1242–1308), had declared himself a supporter of the English cause; he left his wife in charge of their strategic castle at Dunbar to join Edward I. Unlike her husband, Marjory Comyn was committed to the Guardian-controlled government of the realm, then dominated by the Comyn family and their followers. In Earl Patrick’s absence, she delivered Dunbar to a Scottish raiding party, forcing Edward I to detach from his army a substantial force to recapture the castle. The English proved victorious, but her actions confirmed Comyn commitment to Scottish independence. cjn

• McBain, J. and Cowle, K. (eds) (1997) With an Eye to the Future: Donald Alexander and Budge Cooper, documentary film makers [contains filmography], Moving Image Archive, NLS (formerly Scottish Screen Archive). CORDINER, Helen Thomson, m. Ritchie, born Peterhead 30 July 1893, died Musselburgh 14 Dec. 1964. Herring gutter. Daughter of Jane Buchan, domestic servant, and Francis Cordiner, fisherman. Helen Cordiner’s mother died from a chronic lung disease, aged 35, in 1898, leaving six children, the youngest six months old. The Cordiner daughters worked at the herring to help their father to support the family. Helen Cordiner attended Buckhaven Primary School, Peterhead, then from age 13 or 14 worked as a herring gutter. Official documents list her occupation as ‘fishworker’. In a crew with her sisters, Marjorie and Jane Ann, she gutted and graded herring, standing on quaysides, working in 10 to 12 hour shifts. Female Scottish fishworkers were a highly skilled, mobile workforce who dominated the herring industry: thousands of women travelled around fishing ports, working for curing companies. Each November, end-of-season bonuses were paid to the packer, supposedly for sharing, though Helen was unhappy that Jane Ann as packer kept these bonuses herself. In 1912, Helen Cordiner married Andrew Ritchie, a fisherman she met while working in South Shields. Thereafter they lived in Fisherrow, the fishing community of Musselburgh, with the surviving five of their eight children. She was a tough household manager: if her husband returned from fishing trips without any money, he had to wait at the door for permission to enter the house. Her daughter Jean (1913–2003) worked for a time in the local fishing net mill. mr

• Barrow, G. W. S. (1988) Robert Bruce ; Riley, H. T. (ed.) (1865) Willelmi Rishanger . . . Chronica et Annales; Rothwell, H. (ed.) (1957) The Chronicle of Walter of Guisborough; Young, A. (1997) Robert Bruce’s Rivals: the Comyns, 1212–1314. COOPER, Brigid Winifred Thérèse (Budge), m. Alexander, born Putney, London 2 Sept. 1913,

died Dundee 25 April 1983. Documentary film-maker. Daughter of Alinda Hayes, and George Alexander Cooper, film technician. Starting as a continuity girl at Elstree, Budge Cooper was part of the British documentary movement of the 1930s–40s, which created openings for women such as *Ruby and Marion Grierson and herself to start directing. In 1941, while working for the Crown Unit, she met documentary filmmaker Donald Alexander (1913–93), of Scottish descent, whom she married in 1945. In 1942, after leaving her job as assistant to Humphrey Jennings, the couple joined Paul Rotha Productions, and both filmed social- and health-themed documentaries. Budge Cooper was responsible for two key Scottish documentaries. She scripted and directed Children of the City (1944), commissioned by the Scottish Office via the MOI, which examined child delinquency in Dundee. Having, with her husband and others, formed the co-operative film unit Documentary Technicians Alliance (DATA), her second Scottish project, sponsored by the Department of Health for Scotland, was ‘Birth-day’ (1945, co-director Mary Beales), a film encouraging women to seek medical advice in early pregnancy. Budge Cooper directed several films for the National Coal Board, including First Aid in the Mines: burns from a colliery explosion (1960). To make this, she had to challenge an Act of Parliament to allow her, as a woman, to go underground. In 1969 the couple moved to Dundee, where Donald Alexander taught at the University and Budge Cooper spent the rest of her life. JB r

• Personal knowledge; private information and family records. ‘Countrywoman’

(1923–96)

see GRIEVE, Jemima Bessie

COUSIN, Anne Ross, n. Cundell, born Hull 27 April 1824, died Edinburgh 6 Dec. 1906. Hymn writer. Daughter of Anne Parker, and David Ross Cundell, a Scottish army surgeon present at the battle of Waterloo. When Anne Cundell was a small child, the family moved to Leith. In 1847 she married Rev. William Cousin (1812–83), minister of Chelsea Presbyterian Church, London, later of the Free Church of Scotland, Irvine and after 1859, Melrose.

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They had six children. In 1854 at Irvine she wrote a celebrated hymn, ‘The sands of time are sinking’, published in The Christian Treasury for 1857. Its title was ‘Last Words of Samuel Rutherford’, referring to the Covenanter (1600–61) whose last words were ‘Glory, Glory dwelleth in Emmanuel’s land’, which gave Cousin the motif for the last two lines of each verse. It also gave the title to her collection of poems, Immanuel’s Land and other Pieces (1876). Seven of her hymns were published in The Service of Praise (1865) and four in the Presbyterian Hymnal of 1876. Part of a stained glass window to her memory (retrieved from St Aidan’s Free Church) survives in the vestry of Melrose Parish Church. It reads: ‘I’ll bless the hand that guided/ I’ll bless the heart that planned’. JRW

ill health, including breast cancer, Evelyn Cowan published nothing further. lf • Cowan, E., Works as above. Burgess, M. (1999) The Glasgow Novel, 3rd edn.; Glasser, R. (1987) Growing up in the Gorbals; Glasgow Herald, 8 Dec. 1976, p. 9 (interview); Jewish Chronicle, 17 April 1998 (obit.). COWAN, Minna Galbraith, OBE, born Belmont, Paisley 1 May 1878, died Edinburgh 8 July 1951. Author, Unionist candidate, active in public life. Daughter of Williamina Galbraith, and Hugh Cowan, sheriff. Born into an eminent legal family, Minna Cowan was educated in Hendon, Glasgow and Girton College (1897–1900). ‘Imbued with a great desire to work for women’ (Edinburgh Evening News 1935), she was an early student for the social science diploma in Edinburgh, sharing a New Town flat with her brother. Like many educated women of the time, she created a semi-professional career in public life, mixing elected office and committee appointments. A study tour of India resulted in a book arguing for solutions ‘on Indian and womanly lines’ (Cowan 1912, p. 222). In 1914 she was elected to the Edinburgh School Board. Having been a principal in the WRNS for part of the war, in 1919 she became first convener of the statutory local advisory council of the Education Authority, being directly elected to the Authority in 1921. Her initiatives included free school meals during the holidays, out-of-school play centres and cutting class size to 50. In 1923, Minna Cowan became convener of the Higher Education committee, managing the city’s nine secondary schools. After co-option to the council Education Committee in 1930, she published an authoritative commentary on the Children and Young Persons (Scotland) Act 1932. Her essay on foreign policy in Political Idealism (1924) (by ‘four Unionist women’, including *Margaret Kidd), argued for a greater role for the League of Nations. She stood as Unionist candidate for Paisley (1929) and as National Government candidate for Edinburgh East (1935), without success. She chaired the Edinburgh branch of the NCW, becoming national president 1946–7 (thereafter international vice-president). During the war, she worked for the Ministry of Food in the East of Scotland, helping develop British Restaurants and writing on the social consequences of evacuation. She made frequent post-war visits to Germany, arguing for social reconstruction and, as NCW president, establishing links with the German

• Beattie, D. J. (n.d., prob. 1934) Stories and Sketches of our Hymns and their Writers; Julian, J. (1892, 1907) A Dictionary of Hymnology; Kerrigan, C. (ed.) (1991) An Anthology of Scottish Women Poets; ODNB (2004); Telford, J. (1934) The New Methodist Hymn Book, Illustrated; CDH. COWAN (formerly Cohen), Evelyn, m. Cohen, born Glasgow 18 Jan. 1921, died Glasgow 8 March 1998. Writer. Daughter of Mary Banks, and Simon Cohen or Cowan, tailor. The youngest of eleven children of Lithuanian Jewish parents, Evelyn Cowan grew up in the Gorbals. As a young woman, she contributed stories and articles to various publications. She married Paul Cohen, a schoolteacher, in 1950 and they had three sons. She was in middle age when her memoir, Spring Remembered (1974), appeared. Her memories of childhood poverty have been deemed sentimental, as compared with her contemporary Ralph Glasser’s, but she aimed to write affectionately about immigrant struggles. In her view, being poor did not preclude a secure upbringing: ‘It was a world of poverty which to me, was not misery, but rich and happy’ (Cowan 1974, p. 10). She is recalled as an energetic and forthright woman, active in Jewish charities. Her novel A Portrait of Alice (1976) illustrates her intention not to deceive. Described as a ‘taut book of loneliness, despair and rejection’ (Glasgow Herald 1976), it is set in Glasgow’s comfortable suburbs and reflects middle-class living, more representative of Jewish experience in Scotland by the 1970s. Its unflinching gaze at aspects of Jewish life and a middle-aged woman’s lot could make uncomfortable reading, but its author was ‘unrepentant about its harsh reality’ (ibid.). Critical acclaim followed, and another novel was planned but, perhaps because of

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women’s movement, seeing women’s participation in public life as crucial to its democratic future. She also campaigned for refugees and for the rehabilitation of Greek villages, attending an Athens conference in 1951, shortly before her death. One obituary recalled her ‘unflagging enthusiasm in causes that were often difficult to initiate and . . . to sustain’ (Scotsman 1951). SI

the Frankfurt Book Fair in 1953, Coronation year, for Court Favourites. Another successful book was Collins Family Cookery (1957). Marguerite Patten defined Elizabeth Craig’s appeal thus: ‘Her recipes were totally honest. Her readers did not just like her – they loved her’ (personal information). She took pride in replying personally to the hundreds of letters from her worldwide readership. Elizabeth Craig was a regular contributor to Queen, the Daily Express and Sunday Express; she was Woman’s Journal cookery editor for 30 years, and wrote for The Scottish Field and People’s Friend into her nineties. She was a popular, outspoken member of Freddie Grisewood’s Brains Trust, and on the Michael Parkinson show, stunned her host by announcing that her favourite place to make love would be in the Highland heather. Her last book, Hotch Potch, was published in 1978 on her 95th birthday, and in 1979 she was made MBE. A free-spirited woman with a generous heart, who inspired women to make the most of their lives, she remained intensely loyal to her Scottish family, old friends, and homeland, retaining her accent to the end. Her ashes were returned to Kirriemuir. eje

• Cowan, M. G., Work as above and (1912) The Education of the Women of India, (1926) ‘Education’ in M. Rackstraw (ed.) A Social Survey of the City of Edinburgh, (1933) The Children and Young Persons (Scotland) Act 1932, (1944) Our Scottish Towns: evacuation and the social future, (1947) ‘Sidelights on Germany’, Girton Rev. pp. 3–5, Lent term. Edinburgh Evening News, 4 Nov. 1935; *ODNB (2004); The Scotsman and Edinburgh Evening Dispatch, 10 July 1951 (obits). CRAIG, Elizabeth Josephine, MBE, m. Mann, born Addiewell, West Lothian, 16 Feb. 1883, died Wexham Park Hospital, Bucks, 7 June 1980. Journalist, cookery writer. Daughter of Catherine Nicoll, and Rev. John Mitchell Craig, of Forfar. Elizabeth Craig attended Forfar Academy and George Watson’s Ladies’ College, Edinburgh, later teaching at her village school. In 1912 she joined John Leng & Co., Dundee, gaining experience on the People’s Friend, People’s Journal and Dundee Advertiser. Early assignments included interviewing the poet William McGonagall and reporting on a garden party at Glamis Castle, where she encountered the young *Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon (see Elizabeth, Queen and Queen Mother), riding her pony. In 1915, she became one of the first female editors in Fleet Street, on Woman’s Life magazine. After marrying Arthur E. Mann, an American war correspondent, in 1919, she became a freelance writer and an established authority on food and wine. She travelled widely, giving her writing a cosmopolitan flavour and in 1923 she published the first of more than 40 books. Elizabeth Craig taught the postwar generation of young middle-class women, now with no servants, how to keep house, budget, cook with electricity and above all to have confidence in the kitchen. During the Second World War she worked with the Ministry of Food and Agriculture, talking to Women’s Institutes and other organisations throughout Britain on food rationing and wartime diet. Audiences crowded into her lectures – to receive practical help, but also to enjoy hilarious anecdotes. Among numerous awards she was especially proud of a gold medal at

• Craig, E., Works as above and see NLS catalogue [36 listed] Personal information (niece).

m. Knox, born Edinburgh 17 Oct. 1831, died Brockley, Suffolk, 23 Dec. 1903. Poet, feminist and social reformer. Daughter of Ann Braick, and John Craig, hosier and glover. Raised by her grandmother after the early death of her parents, Isa Craig attended school only until 1840. Yet by 1853, she had joined the staff of The Scotsman, writing literary reviews and articles on social questions. In 1856, her first book, Poems by Isa, appeared and, with Bessie Parkes, she contributed to the Glasgow-based women’s periodical, the Waverley Journal. When Bessie Parkes became editor and moved the journal to London, Isa Craig followed to assist and continued her regular contributions after its re-launch in 1858 as the Englishwoman’s Journal. In 1857, she became Assistant Secretary of NAPSS, the key forum for the discussion of social issues in the mid-Victorian period. She was also committed to the Ladies Sanitary Association associated with NAPSS and founded in the same year, which aimed to give public health a human face. Her work with the secretary of the NAPSS, barrister G. W. Hastings, exemplified the principle of the sexual communion of labour, bringing masculine and feminine elements into public life to achieve ‘a

CRAIG, Isa,

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stereoscopic view’ and fuller social progress (Cobbe 1861, p. 92). She left the Association to marry her cousin, London iron merchant John Knox, in 1866 but continued her literary career, writing poetry, including a prize-winning entry in a competition to celebrate the Burns centenary in 1866, and her most highly regarded collection, Songs of Consolation (1874). Her Poems: an Offering to Lancashire (1863) and Duchess Agnes . . . and Other Poems (1864) demonstrated her abolitionist sentiment. She edited The Argosy and contributed to Fraser’s Magazine, Good Words, and The Quiver, and also published a drama, novels and children’s textbooks and histories designed for the education of women, including the Little Folks’ History of England (1872). ey

possibly as a strategy for raising money. She moved first to Dolgellau in Wales to teach at Dr Williams’ School, and then to Bishop Otter College, Chichester, to lecture in modern languages. While in Argentina, Maggie Dale became engaged to be married and Bessie Craigmyle saw her plans for their future together crumbling. When the news came that her love had died of a fever, she suffered a nervous breakdown. She recovered, aided by a trip to Italy to convalesce. She also formed another close friendship with a woman, overshadowed by her continuing grief for Maggie Dale. She returned to her family home in Aberdeen, where she taught in various schools and also worked as a translator. Her second volume of poetry, A Handful of Pansies, was published in 1888. She was commissioned to edit an edition of Faust in 1889 and to translate and edit German Ballads in 1892. Individual poems appeared in several national anthologies. Thereafter her literary output dwindled. She resolved her earlier religious doubts and became an Episcopalian. She was an active member of the High School for Girls’ Former Pupils Club and designed and donated the President’s Chain, still in use today. Bessie Craigmyle died tragically. She fell asleep by her fireside, her clothes caught fire and she succumbed to her injuries the following day. ATM

• Craig, I., Works as above, and see Alston (Bibl.). Alston, R. C. (1990) A Checklist of Women Writers 1801–1900. Fiction, Verse, Drama (Bibl.); Cambridge History of English and American Literature (1907–21), vol. 13; Cobbe, F. P. (1861) ‘Social science congresses and women’s part in them’, Macmillan’s Magazine, Dec.; ODNB (2004); Rendall, J. (1987) ‘ “A Moral Engine”: feminism, liberalism and the Englishwoman’s Journal’, in J. Rendall (ed.) Equal or Different ; Uglow, J. (ed.) (1998) Macmillan Dictionary of Women’s Biography, 3rd edn.; Yeo, E. J. (1996) The Contest for Social Science. Relations and Representations of Gender and Class. http://gerald-massey.org.uk/craig

• Craigmyle, B., Works as above. McCall, A. T. (2005) ‘The poetry and life of Bessie Craigmyle (1863–1933), the Sappho of Strawberry Bank’, Aberdeen University Review 61, pp. 109–21.

CRAIGMYLE, Elizabeth (Bessie),‡ born

Aberdeen 4 Sept. 1863, died Aberdeen 28 Feb. 1933. Poet and translator. Daughter of Emma Bearham, and Francis Craigmyle, teacher. Bessie Craigmyle was the fourth in a family of five daughters. A child prodigy, who started writing poetry at the age of seven, she was educated at McBain’s School, which later became the High School for Girls. She gained the degree of LLA in 1882. In her teens she was beset by religious doubt and the problem of what to do with her life. This problem was resolved when she met Maggie Dale, who was to become the love of her life, and who had trained to be a teacher with the intention of earning enough to fund a medical degree abroad. Bessie Craigmyle attended the Church of Scotland Teacher Training College in Aberdeen, while planning a future as a doctor in partnership with her. In 1885, Maggie Dale took a post at St Andrew’s Scotch School, Buenos Aires, to raise money for her future career. Bessie Craigmyle published her first volume of poetry, Poems and Translations, in 1886,

born Arbigland, near Dumfries, c. 1751, died Flimby, Cumberland, 11 June 1825. Novelist. Daughter of Elizabeth Stewart, and William Craik, powerful landlord, rumoured also to be the father of John Paul Jones (1747–92). Helen Craik moved to her family’s other ­property, Flimby Hall, Cumberland, in 1792, a self-exile precipitated by the mysterious death of her lover, a groom on her father’s estate. Local sources suggest her family had killed him because they disapproved of the relationship. These dramatic events echo throughout her autobiographical fiction, which focuses on the economic and sexual double standards of British patriarchy, invoking ­feminist arguments by contemporaries such as Mary Wollstonecraft. Helen Craik published five novels anonymously between 1796 and 1805 with William Lane’s popular Minerva Press, and wrote poetry admired by her friend Robert Burns.

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Julia de St Pierre (1796) offers a sentimental portrait of a French emigrant woman as virtue in distress. Adelaide de Narbonne, with Memoirs of Charlotte de Cordet [sic] (1800) is her most innovative historical novel, possibly the first British fictional account of Marat’s assassin, Charlotte Corday. Drawing on the Gothic romances of Anne Radcliffe and Horace Walpole, Helen Craik fashioned a unique hybrid of historical Gothic, addressing controversial recent events in France, particularly women’s active participation in politics. Concern with women’s rights is also visible in Stella of the North (1802), set in Dumfriesshire, and in The Nun and Her Daughter (1805). Henry of Northumberland (1800) is Helen Craik’s only known novel not set in the recent past. Her obituaries and memorial in St Nicholas Church, Flimby, remember her as an author and a dedicated philanthropist. ac

of Glasgow. Mackintosh and his wife, *Margaret Macdonald, were given freedom to create the whole building and its contents. The result was one of the finest examples of Art Nouveau in Scotland. ‘Miss’ Cranston did marry, but when her husband, John Cochrane (1857–1917), died, she sold the Argyle and Buchanan Street tea-rooms, and in 1919 retired completely. Kate Cranston followed older fashions – she was thought eccentric for her insistence on wearing the outmoded crinoline – but her business acumen and sponsorship of new styles in the arts were never in question. ls • Burkhauser, J. (ed.) (1990) Glasgow Girls, pp. 35–8; Kinchin, P. (1998) Taking Tea with Mackintosh, (1999) Miss Cranston; Muir, J. H. (1901) Glasgow in 1901, pp. 166 ff.; ODNB (2004). CRAWFORD, Jane Glen, born Stirling 14 April 1864, died Edinburgh 27 Oct. 1947. First female inspector of domestic economy in Scotland. Daughter of Margaret Glen, and William Crawford, journeyman blacksmith. Jane Crawford started as a pupil-teacher. Once qualified, she taught senior classes, but resigned in 1892 to train at the Edinburgh School of Cookery. After teaching girls and women in Tranent and then in Dumfriesshire districts, she returned to the School of Cookery as a staff teacher in 1893. There she ran free continuation classes in domestic subjects for over-15s, funded by Edinburgh Town Council. Asked to participate in the newly established examination of schools and students of cookery, she became in 1902 the first Woman Inspector of Domestic Economy appointed by the Scotch (later Scottish) Education Department. In 1910, when two more female inspectors were appointed, she became first Principal Woman Officer. Her duties included inspecting the professional training courses for domestic economy teachers and inspection of all schools in the Southern Division, plus the development of appropriate school-leaving certificates. When she retired in 1925, she was honoured as a key educator of women by representatives of the Training Schools and teachers of domestic subjects throughout Scotland. jm c d

• Craik, H. Works as above. Arnott, S. (1923–4) ‘The romance of Helen Craik of Arbigland’, Trans. Dumf. & Gall. Nat. Hist. and Antiqu. Soc., no. 11; Blakey, D. (1939) The Minerva Press 1790–1820; Craciun, A. ‘The new Cordays: Helen Craik and British ­representations of Charlotte Corday 1793–1800’, in A. Craciun and K. Lokke (eds) (2001) Rebellious Heart ; *ODNB (2004). CRANSTON, Catherine (Kate) (aka Miss Cranston), m. Cochrane, born Glasgow 27 May 1849, died

Glasgow 18 April 1934. Tea-room owner and patron of the arts. Daughter of Grace Lace, and George Cranston, hotel-keeper. Kate Cranston’s brother Stuart pioneered tearooms in Glasgow, but ‘Miss Cranston’s tea-rooms’ became more famous. Kate Cranston was unusual for the time in becoming a businesswoman in her own right. Intending her establishments to be unique, she brought the talented designers, George Walton and Charles Rennie Mackintosh to work on the interiors. Mackintosh remained closely associated with her premises, producing new designs for the existing Argyle and Ingram Street rooms, helping make Glasgow ‘a very Tokio for tea-rooms’ (Muir 1901, p. 166). The MackintoshCranston partnership excelled, however, in the still partly existing Willow Tea-rooms in Sauchiehall Street (1903), where Kate Cranston’s own ideas on the importance of décor for the quality of the customer’s experience were implemented. A substantial operation with five tea-rooms, a dining gallery and a billiard room, the establishment was intended to exert a ‘civilising’ influence on the population

• Begg, T. (1994) The Excellent Women; Bone, T. R. (1968) School Inspection in Scotland 1840–1966; Edinburgh School of Cookery Magazine, Dec. 1925, 11, 25, pp. 2–5.

m. Buthlay, born Kilmaurs 5 June 1909, died Milltimber, Aberdeenshire, 11 Feb. 1988. Royal governess.

CRAWFORD, Marion Kirk, (‘Crawfie’),

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Daughter of Margaret Jack, and John Inglis Crawford, engineer’s clerk. Marion Crawford grew up in Dunfermline and graduated from Moray House Training College in 1931. Temporary work as governess to local titled families introduced her to the Duke and Duchess of York, who took her on as governess to their daughters for a trial month’s period. She remained there, affectionately known as ‘Crawfie’, for 16 years. In 1936, the Duke of York became King, and she was now governess to Princesses Elizabeth, heir to the throne, and *Margaret Rose (see Snowdon). She attempted to broaden the girls’ view of life, taking them on the London underground and starting Brownies and Guides at Buckingham Palace. A dedicated governess, she postponed her marriage to Aberdeenshire banker George Buthlay (1893–1977) until after the Second World War, and left to live with her husband only after Princess Elizabeth’s marriage in 1947. Her notoriety came from her memoirs of 1949, published in serial form and then as a book, The Little Princesses. Publication of these affectionate but intimate revelations came about as a mixture of pressure from the editors of the Ladies Home Journal (USA) and at least partial misunderstandings over royal permission and the contract. Whatever the explanation, Marion Crawford was the first of many palace employees to take her story to the media, and her employers were outraged. Neither the two princesses nor their mother spoke to her again, though two other Scottish nannies, Helen Lightbody (d. 1987) and Mabel Anderson, were later employed by Queen Elizabeth II to care for her own children. Marion Buthlay lived thereafter in a cottage near Balmoral. Her (ghosted) royal column for Woman’s Own came to grief over a faux pas not of her making. George Buthlay died in 1977, and Crawfie lived alone until 1988, depressed and twice attempting suicide. fj • Crawford, M. (1949, re-ed. 1991 with foreword by Jennie Bond) The Little Princesses. ODNB (2004); Pimlott, B. (1996) The Queen: a biography of Elizabeth II; The Royal Encyclopaedia (1991); Taylor, A., ‘Crawfiegate: the original royal scandal’, Sunday Herald, 27 Jan. 2002. CRAWFURD, Helen, n. Jack, m1 Crawfurd, m2 Anderson, born Gorbals, Glasgow, 9 Nov. 1877,

died Dunoon 18 April 1954. Suffragette and Communist activist. Daughter of Helen Kyle, and William Jack, master baker.

The fourth of seven children, Helen Jack spent her early childhood in the Gorbals. She was educated in Ipswich and London and returned to Glasgow in 1894. Her home background was one of lively religious and political debate; both parents were active Conservatives. In 1898 she married a local evangelical minister, Alexander Montgomerie Crawfurd (1830–1914), whose anti-war views she shared, but she found church work oppressive, disagreed with biblical attitudes to women and pursued her own study of women’s literature. That led to an interest in women’s suffrage and in 1910 she joined the WSPU. She was arrested five times, imprisoned in Holloway, London, Duke Street, Glasgow, and Perth prisons and endured three hunger strikes of up to eight days. Of robust character and physique, she acted as Emmeline Pankhurst’s bodyguard, but their close relationship ended when Mrs Pankhurst adopted a pro-war stance in 1914. Helen Crawfurd felt betrayed, left the WSPU and after her husband’s death joined the ILP and visited Ireland to contact James Connolly and Irish women revolutionaries. In 1915, as Secretary of the Glasgow Women’s Housing Association, she led the rent strike and also set up the Glasgow branch of the WIL. In 1916, with *Agnes Dollan and *Mary Barbour she founded and was Secretary of the Women’s Peace Crusade in Scotland, launched nationally in Glasgow on 10 June 1917. She represented the British delegation at the Zurich WIL Congress in 1919, and on return helped John Maclean establish the Scottish Labour College; previously her interest in political education had been pursued in the Glasgow Fabian Society. As Vice-president of the ILP Scottish division, she was invited to Moscow where, after speaking with Lenin, she called for the ILP to affiliate to the Communist International. The ILP did not do so and in 1921 she joined the CPGB and became a member of the national executive. A rousing platform speaker, she was held in great affection and respect. She edited a women’s page in The Communist. In November 1921, she first stood, unsuccessfully, as a CP candidate for Govan Ward. Throughout the 1920s, as secretary of Workers’ International Relief, she travelled nationwide and abroad, raising funds for famine and disaster victims, and in 1926 distributed food to children of striking miners in Fife. Retiring to Dunoon in 1935, she remained active in anti-fascist campaigning. In 1938, she organised the huge Peace and Empire Conference in Glasgow. In 1944, she married George Anderson (1872–1952), 100

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and from 1945 until 1948 served as Dunoon’s first woman councillor, strongly supporting the cause of Scottish self-government. Her life and work ‘personified all that was best in revolutionary womanhood’ (Hunter 1954, p. 4). ac a • NLS: Helen Crawfurd collection. Crawfurd, H. (n.d.) unpublished autobiography (copy also in Marx Memorial Library, London); ‘Mrs Pankhurst, whom does she represent?’, Forward, 16 June 1919; Election Address, Govan Ward, 1 Nov. 1921; ‘A page for women’, The Communist, 15 July 1922; Hunter, M., Funeral tribute, 1954. Gallacher, W. (1936) Revolt on the Clyde ; Liddington, J. (1985) The Long Road to Greenham; ODNB (2004); SLL; Scottish Women and the Vote, Strathclyde Regional Council Educ. Dept. (n.d.); Wiltsher, A. (1985) Most Dangerous Women.

n. Grierson, born Rockhall, Dumfriesshire, 1779, died Auchengray, Lanarkshire, 11 Oct. 1862. Philanthropist. Daughter of Margaret Dalzell, and Sir Robert Grierson, 5th baronet of Lag and Rockhall. The eldest daughter of 11 children, Elizabeth Grierson lived at Rockhall until she married Dr James Crichton (1765–1823) on 14 November 1810, when Friars’ Carse, Dumfriesshire, became her home. Widowed and childless in 1823, with an ample provision, she became an outstanding benefactor to psychiatry as co-founder of Crichton Royal Hospital, Dumfries, and remained closely involved with its work. She was the presiding force of five trustees seeking a ‘charitable purpose’ for the trust fund of £100,000, amassed while Dr Crichton served as physician to the GovernorGeneral and as a trader in India. The trust established a private asylum, now known as Crichton Royal Hospital, in 1839, against local opposition. According to the terms of the Crichton Act (1840) the income was to be devoted to care. Elizabeth Crichton’s main interest was in aiding people of her own class in reduced circumstances. By 1938, hospital lands extended to around 405 hectares, with 21 major buildings and exceptional facilities. Mindful of the interests of her husband, her charitable interests also extended to education in Sanquhar, Dumfries and India. Her godson, the eminent Victorian psychiatrist, Sir James Crichton-Browne (1840–1938), son of the asylum’s first physician superintendent, Dr. W. A. F. Browne, described her as ‘a prim little lady . . . of a somewhat sombre manner . . . but genial and kindly withal, highly intelligent and well-informed’, and recalled her visits to the hospital, ‘for monthly meetings or conferences CRICHTON, Elizabeth,

with my father or to make calls on lady patients’, and ‘picnics she arranged at Friars’ Carse, when parties of patients were hospitably entertained . . . (Crichton-Browne 1940, p. 3). Elizabeth Crichton’s original proposal had been to found a university college. Nothing came of a scheme to transfer the University of St Andrews, in difficulties in the 1820s, to Dumfries to take advantage of the Crichton fortune. But in fulfilment of that dream, Crichton campus has, since 1999, housed satellite colleges of the universities of Glasgow and the West of Scotland on the former hospital site. A bronze statue of Elizabeth Crichton by Bill Scott (2000) stands 50 metres north-east of Crichton Memorial Church. MW • Crichton Royal Hospital, Dumfries: Dumfries and Galloway Health Board Archives. Anderson, A. (2001) Crichton University; Dumfries Times, 19 Oct. 1834; Easterbrook, C. C. (1940) Chronicle of Crichton Royal 1833–1936 with foreword by Sir James CrichtonBrowne; ODNB (2004).

born 1483, died c. 1546. Customs-collector. Daughter of Margaret Stewart, Princess of Scotland, and William, 3rd Lord Crichton. The illegitimate daughter of *Margaret Stewart (c. 1460–c. 1503), daughter of James II, Margaret Crichton was probably raised at the royal court. From a liaison of unknown date with Patrick Panter (c. 1470–1519), the king’s secretary, she had two illegitimate children. Around 1506, she married Edinburgh burgess William Todrik. Widowed in 1507, by 1510 she had married George Halkerston, burgess and custumar (customscollector) of Edinburgh, and had one son. George died at Flodden (1513); Margaret Crichton and Janet Paterson, widow of Edinburgh’s provost and co-custumar, then took over their late husbands’ customs offices. Margaret Crichton was sole custumar for a month in 1516. She married George Leslie, Earl of Rothes (d. 1558), before August 1517. Five children were born but the marriage was dissolved in December 1520. She lived thereafter mainly in Edinburgh. EE

CRICHTON, Margaret,

• ER, xiv; RMS, iii, no. 2072; TA, vols i, vi, vii; ODNB (2004) (Leslie, George, 4th Earl of Rothes; Panter, Patrick); SP, iii, pp. 64–7, iv, pp. 281–9; Wood, M. (ed.) (1953) Protocol Book of John Foular 1519–28. CROALL, Annie Knight, born Guthrie, Montrose, 29 July 1854, died Stirling 1 June 1927. Philanthropist. Daughter of Mary MacKay, and Alexander Croall,

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teacher, founding curator of the Smith Institute (now Smith Art Gallery and Museum), Stirling. Annie Croall was educated in Loanhead, near Montrose, and from 1863 in Derby, England. She arrived in Stirling with her father in 1874 and immediately involved herself in charitable work on behalf of the town’s indigent women and children. Driven by her religious calling, she opened the Young Women’s Evangelistic Mission in Stirling and organised weekly prayer meetings conducted by women, monthly Bible readings, a lending library, a clothes depot and district visitors for poor families. In 1880, she opened a refuge for homeless and outcast women in Broad Street and in 1883 she moved the refuge to larger premises with a laundry. In the same year she closed the refuge and opened a day nursery and boarding home for destitute and neglected children. In the 1890s she opened the Whinwell Children’s Home (WCH) in Whinwell House, Upper Bridge Street. Described by her obituary writer as Stirling’s ‘most public-spirited citizen’ (Stirling Observer), Annie Croall was motivated by her Christian faith. ‘The great aim of our work, and the desire of our heart, is their CONVERSION’ she wrote of children who found refuge in her home (WCH Annual Report, 1898). She was an enthusiastic proponent of child emigration, sending more than 200 children to Canada, Australia and South Africa. The Whinwell Home continued under her direction until her death and remained a children’s home until 1980. In the words of her obituary, ‘. . . The people of Stirling and elsewhere have every reason to be grateful to her for the rescue of so many children’. She is buried in Stirling’s Valley Cemetery near the Church of the Holy Rude. lca • Stirling Archive Services, PD 41: Whinwell Children’s Home; PD 41/1/1, Annual Reports. Croall, A. K. (1923) Fifty Years on a Scottish Battlefield, 1873–1923. Abrams, L. (1998) The Orphan Country: Children of Scotland’s Broken Homes From 1845 to the Present Day; Stirling Observer, 7 June 1927 (obit.). CROFTON, Eileen Chris (Lady Crofton), MBE, n. Mercer, born Liverpool 28 March 1919, died Edinburgh 8 Oct. 2010. Physician, writer, campaigner. Daughter of Edith Mary Mackay, and Richard Mercer, engineer. Eileen Mercer attended North London Collegiate School and Somerville College, Oxford, graduating in medicine in 1943. She joined the RAMC in 1944, where she met fellow physician

John Crofton (1912–2009, Kt. 1977). They married, moving north in 1952 when John became professor of respiratory diseases and tuberculosis at the University of Edinburgh. In 1971, John Crofton was involved in setting up Action on Smoking and Health (ASH) under the auspices of the Royal College of Physicians. Eileen Crofton was instrumental in setting up ASH (Scotland) in 1973. While raising five children, she was its first medical director, producing meticulously researched papers and lecturing internationally. An ‘indefatigable powerhouse’ (Scotsman), she initiated ASH women’s committee which grew into the International Network of Women Against Tobacco (INWAT). In 1979, she joined WHO’s expert committee on smoking. She was also medical officer and vice-president of Midlothian Red Cross, gaining their Certificate of Honour. She represented ASH on the committee of SCOW, working on equality issues and becoming SCOW Vice-chair. In 1984 she was made MBE for services to public health. At a conference in France, she noticed a First World War memorial to the *Scottish Women’s Hospital at Royaumont. In retirement, she researched the hospital’s history, publishing a popular, scholarly book (Crofton 1997). Her daughter later completed an unfinished work on early women medical students (Crofton and Raemaekers 2014). BEM/KMD • Crofton, E. (1997) The Women of Royaumont, reissued as Angels of Mercy, Foreword, Tam Dalyell (2013), (2010) ‘Notes on a beginning’, www.inwat.org; Crofton, E. and Raemaekers, P. (2014) A Painful Inch to Gain, www.fast-print. net/bookshop; RCPE interview: www.rcpe.ac.uk/library/ listen/interviews/crofton The Herald, 13 Oct. 2010, Independent, 14 Oct. 2010, The Scotsman, 13 Oct. 2010 (obits); RCPE www.rcpe.ac.uk/obituary/lady-eileen-crofton-mbe eODNB (Crofton, J.) Personal knowledge.

born Gladsmuir, Lothian, 18 June 1768, died Tranent, Lothian, 29 August 1797. Anti-Militia campaigner. Daughter of Agnes Hogg, and James Crookstone. Little is known about Jackie Crookstone, apart from the heroic stance she took against the Scottish Militia Act of 1797. The act aimed to supply able men for Britain’s expanding empire, but local miners opposed enforced conscription. On 28 August 1797, the day before the Tranent registrar was to draw up his ballot, Jackie

CROOKSTONE, Jackie,

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Crookstone organised a protest march, joined by women from Gladsmuir and elsewhere as they marched towards Tranent and Prestonpans. She used her drum to orchestrate continual chants of ‘No Militia’, intimidating local justices and landowners on the ballot committee. The ballot went ahead on 29 August, amid serious rioting. Soldiers were summoned and killed 11 people in the ‘Tranent Massacre’. Dragoons ‘mopping up’ afterwards were probably responsible for killing Jackie Crookstone. Her body lay in a cornfield for several weeks until discovered by harvesters. Her death was never officially recorded; she was possibly the victim of summary justice for being a female ringleader of the riot. mmm • Hopkins, B. (2002) ‘The enigma of Jackie Crookstone’, East Lothian Life, 39; M’Neill, P. (1883) Tranent and its Surroundings, pp. 124–48. CRUDELIUS, Mary, n. M’Lean, born Bury, Lancs., 23 Feb. 1839, died Edinburgh 24 July 1877. Campaigner for women’s higher education. Daughter of Mary Alexander, and William M’Lean from Dumfriesshire, merchant. Mary M’Lean was partly educated at Miss Turnbull’s boarding school in Edinburgh. In 1861, she married Rudolph Crudelius, a German wool merchant working in Leith, and they had two daughters (see Burnet, Edith). Mary Crudelius founded the higher education for women movement in Scotland through the ELEA, which she set up in 1867 and, as secretary, guided closely through its early years with her eye always on her objective: ‘My aim is (always sub rosa as you know) the throwing open of the University to us, not the organising of a special college for women’ (Burton 1879, p. 81). The ELEA sponsored lectures by university professors on the arts curriculum. Mary Crudelius had begun campaigning quite on her own in 1866. Her letters to school proprietors gaining no response, she turned to the middle class of Edinburgh, who initially treated both her and her proposal with considerable suspicion. Only five years later, however, Professor David Masson could flout the convention of female anonymity to write that ‘Mrs Crudelius was so identified with the Association in its origin, and her subsequent labours on its behalf are so well known that I need not hesitate to name her’ (The Scotsman 1871). She signed the first suffrage petition, but by 1867 had been advised to keep her interests separate, so declined an invitation to join the ENSWS, in order to concentrate on women’s

higher education. Although strong-willed, she was physically delicate and frequently had to convalesce in the south of England, writing instructions and advice to the executive members of the ELEA. She died aged 38, leaving the Association as her memorial. lrm • Edinburgh Univ. Library Special Collections: Gen. 1877 (minutes and corr.). Burton, K. (1879) A Memoir of Mrs Crudelius; ODNB (2004); The Scotsman, letters, 25 Dec. 1871.

born Hillside, Angus, 15 May 1886, died Edinburgh 2 March 1975. Poet and civil servant. Daughter of Sarah Wood, domestic worker at Sunnyside Mental Hospital, Hillside, and George Cruickshank, house steward for the hospital. Nell Cruickshank was the youngest of three children. She attended Hillside Primary School with her two brothers before moving to Montrose Academy. She was a clever pupil but since the family could not afford to send her to university she sat examinations for the Civil Service. In 1903 she took up an appointment in the West Kensington branch of the Post Office Savings Bank in London, which offered her opportunities for theatre-going and suffrage activity. She was an active member of the Hammersmith branch of the WSPU, marching to Hyde Park Corner in a Civil Service contingent and ‘chalking pavements and selling the weekly paper Votes for Women in the streets’ (Cruickshank 1976, pp. 41–2). She returned to a posting in Edinburgh in 1912. She began to write poetry during the First World War. In 1922, C. M. Grieve (Hugh MacDiarmid) included her poem, ‘The Price o’ Johnny’, in the third of his Northern Numbers anthologies. This initiated a lasting relationship with Grieve/MacDiarmid and the Scottish Renaissance movement. She was a founder member of both Scottish PEN (1927) and the Saltire Society (1936) and became Honorary Secretary of Scottish PEN in 1929. Her house in Corstorphine, Edinburgh, ‘Dinnieduff ’, offered hospitality to many Scottish cultural activists. Helen Cruickshank never married. As with many women of her time, it was expected that she would provide a home for her mother when her father died; her mother became part of the literary life at ‘Dinnieduff ’. Three volumes of her poetry were published between 1934 and 1968 and Collected Poems appeared in 1971 and 1978. She was awarded the honorary degree of

CRUICKSHANK, Helen Burness (Nell),

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MA by the University of Edinburgh in 1970. Her Octobiography was published posthumously in 1976. mpm • Univ. of Stirling Library Special Collections: Helen Cruickshank Archive; NLS: Lewis Grassic Gibbon papers. Cruickshank, H., Works as above, and (1934) Up the Noran Water, (1954) Sea Buckthorn, (1968) The Ponnage Pool, (1978) More Collected Poems. Bold, A. (ed.) (1984) The Letters of Hugh MacDiarmid, (1988) MacDiarmid; ODNB (2004). CULLEN, Alice, n. McLoughlin, m1 Bartlett, m2 Cullen, m3 Reynolds, born South Shields 18 March

1891, died Glasgow 30 May 1969. Labour councillor and MP. Daughter of Bridget McKay, and John McLoughlin, railway platelayer. Alice McLoughlin left Lochwinnoch elementary school aged 14 to be apprenticed as a French polisher, a trade that took her to Canada for several years. She married three times: to Harry Bartlett, waiter; to Pearce Cullen, a GPO sorter, in 1920; and to William Reynolds, headmaster, in 1950, and had three daughters. After working in a fruit shop, in 1930 she opened a dairy in Scotland Street, Glasgow. Active in ILP politics from the 1920s, in 1938 she was elected councillor for Glasgow Hutchesontown. In 1941 she became a Justice of the Peace, and in 1948 she won the Labour nomination for Glasgow Gorbals over stiff competition. The first Catholic woman to hold a parliamentary seat, she represented Glasgow Gorbals until her death in 1969. She took particular interest in social questions, especially housing and health, and strongly opposed conscription. Her dedication to her constituents won her the title of ‘Mrs Gorbals’ (Daily Record). cb

• DLabB, vol. 7 (Bibl.); Grehan, E., ‘The Granny they called Mrs Gorbals’, Daily Record, 4 Nov. 1968; Glasgow Herald, 31 May 1969; ODNB (2004); Scottish Catholic Observer, 6 June 1969; The Times, 2 June 1969. CULLEN, Margaret, born Glasgow 1767, died Ilfracombe, Devon, 18 Sept. 1837. Novelist. Daughter of Anna Johnston, and William Cullen, Professor of Medicine at Glasgow and later Edinburgh. Brought up in a family at the heart of the Scottish Enlightenment, on her father’s death Margaret Cullen had to share an annual government pension of £200 with her three sisters, with whom she lived most of her life, mainly in England. Though unknown today, her two novels

suggest a reforming outlook and a committed interest in the condition of women. Home (1802), directly influenced by the debate on the principles of the French Revolution, was a didactic and ­provocative attack on the existing laws of marriage and inheritance, influenced by her own awareness of women’s financial vulnerability. Widely noticed, it went through four editions between 1802 and 1822. Mornton (1814) was less successful but demonstrated her interest in the movement for the humane treatment of animals. Her sister, Robina Millar (1768–1844), married John Craig Millar, radical son of Enlightenment philosopher John Millar, and went with him to Pennsylvania in 1795 to found a more congenial community on the banks of the Susquehanna. On his early death, she returned home to live with her sister. Both sisters inspired the early interest of *Frances Wright in the politics of the American republic. jr • Cullen, M., Works as above. Rendall, J. (2013) ‘Family, politics and reform in Margaret Cullen’s Home: a novel (1802)’, in WESC. CULROSS, Elizabeth, Lady

(c. 1578–c. 1640)

see MELVILLE, Elizabeth

CUMMING, Constance see GORDON-CUMMING, Constance Frederica (1837–1924) CUMMING, Elizabeth, n. Robertson, born Knockando 12 May 1827, died Knockando 19 May 1894. Distiller and farmer. Daughter of Jane Inkson, and Lewis Robertson, farmer. One of five children, Elizabeth Robertson married local whisky distiller, Lewis Cumming, on 20 July 1859, and moved to Cardow, raising three children. The Cardow distillery in Morayshire had humble beginnings as an illicit family operation run by her mother-in-law, Helen Cumming, whose husband John, like others, later obtained a licence under the Excise Act of 1823. No women were recorded as legal distillers at this time, although they were sometimes involved in illicit distilling. Lewis Cumming continued his father’s work until his death in 1872. Elizabeth then took over the management of the distillery and farm, to become one of the handful of female legal distillery proprietors in Scotland. Under Elizabeth Cumming’s administration, the distillery moved to a new site in 1884 and expanded in 1887. She was described as having exceptional good sense and ability, astute business acumen, and untiring perseverance. The local

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banker noted that she had a personal hand in everything, from bookkeeping and correspondence to supervision of every detail of the farm and distillery. In September 1893 she sold the distillery to John Walker & Sons of Kilmarnock, her son John becoming the managing partner. The distillery developed further, despite economic difficulties, to be known today as Cardhu. A strong adherent of the Church of Scotland, Elizabeth Cumming was of generous disposition, liberal to the poor, and respected by both employees and the local community. Her funeral was one of the largest seen in the district. cl • Registration records; Cardhu distillery display panels and publicity booklet, Cardhu, n.d. Elgin Courant, 22 May 1894 (obit.); Minnick, F. (2013) Whiskey Women; Moray and Nairn Express, 26 May 1894 (obit.); WoM.

m. Tulloch, born Patna, India, 1795/6, died Dallas, Morayshire, 24 April 1844. Witness in libel suit, minister’s wife. Daughter of an unknown Indian mother, and George Cumming, East India Company writer; granddaughter of Helen, Lady Cumming Gordon, and Sir Alexander Penrose Cumming Gordon, 1st Baronet of Altyre and Gordonstoun. When Jane Cumming was sent from India to Scotland in 1802, the plan was that she would become a milliner. However, in 1809 her impulsive grandmother Helen, Lady Cumming Gordon n. Grant (1754–1832) transferred her to an Edinburgh boarding school run by Marianne Woods and *Jane Pirie. The teachers were romantic friends who occasionally slept in the same bed. Pirie, irritable by nature, hated this biracial pupil, harshly rebuking her from the start, even more so when she developed an unrequited crush on Woods. Wounded by Pirie’s rebukes and Woods’ rejection, Jane Cumming retaliated by telling her grandmother that the teachers were sexually intimate. Lady Cumming Gordon spread the story. In the defamation suit that started in 1810, the teachers’ lawyers ascribed their pupil’s sexual awareness both to her being half-Indian and to her early upbringing in India, where her mind had been imprinted by lascivious practices unknown in the West. The case reached the House of Lords which, in 1819, accepted that racially and sexually biased argument, determining in favour of the teachers. In 1821 Jane Cumming was married to William Tulloch, a schoolmaster, who in 1824 was CUMMING, Jane,

installed by her heritor uncle Sir William Gordon Cumming as the minister at Dallas. She spent her remaining years there as the minister’s wife. When William turned out to be flirtatious, she, scorned again, reported him to the Presbytery for sexual infidelity. Tulloch was chastised, the scandal suppressed. They continued to live together, but she cut him out of her will. During the Disruption, she adhered to the Free Church while he remained with the Established Church. Once seen as an evil, dirty-minded black girl who destroyed the careers of her innocent white schoolmistresses, Jane Cumming is now more often understood as a victim of racial prejudice. The view that her outbursts were psycho-sexual in nature is also gaining currency. FBS • Singh, F. B. (2013) ‘The girl who raged and her virago of a grandmother: a co-biography of Jane Cumming and Dame Helen Cumming Gordon’, in T. Berg and S. Kane (eds) Women, Gender, and Print Culture in EighteenthCentury Britain; (2011) ’Digging for Jane and finding Yorrick’, Nineteenth-Century Contexts, 33, pp. 53–78. CUNNINGHAM, Elizabeth, Countess of Glencairn, n. Maguire, born Ayrshire 1724, died Edinburgh 24

June 1801. Patron of Robert Burns. Daughter of Isabella Maguire, and Hugh Maguire, carpenter and ‘sixpenny’ fiddler at weddings. The eldest of five children, Elizabeth Maguire was raised from poverty by the generosity of her mother’s cousin, James Macrae, who had returned from India (1731) an exceedingly rich man. He relocated the Maguire family to an estate near Ochiltree and paid for the children’s education and ‘finishing’ at a boarding school. He later secured an advantageous marriage for Elizabeth Maguire to William Cunningham, the impoverished 12th Earl of Glencairn, her dowry including £45,000 in diamonds. As Countess of Glencairn, she overcame her husband’s thinly disguised scorn at being married to a ‘violer’s daughter’, to become a respected member of society. Mindful of her lowly upbringing, she set up a school to teach local girls spinning. With her second son James (13th Earl of Glencairn, 1749–91), she was a patron of Robert Burns and orchestrated his smooth passage into Edinburgh society, introducing him to James’s former tutor William Creech, who published the extended ‘Edinburgh Edition’ of his poems. The Countess bought 124 copies, while her son cajoled the gentlemen of the Caledonian Hunt to subscribe to 100 copies. James’s death was a great personal loss to Burns,

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who wrote one of his most poignant laments in his memory. ejg • Burns, R. (1987) The Collected Letters of Robert Burns; Graham, E. J. (2005) Seawolves; Mackay, J. A. (1993) Burns: a biography of Robert Burns; SP, 4, p. 251. CUNNINGHAM, Lady Margaret, born before 1598, died Malsly Sept. 1623. Writer. Daughter of Margaret Campbell, and James Cunningham, 6th Earl of Glencairn. Lady Margaret Cunningham wrote about her first husband, Sir James Hamilton of Crawfordjohn, Master of Evandale, whom she married 24 January 1598, in a short memoir, A Pairt of the Life of Margaret Cuninghame (1608). She was often forced to turn to her parents, her sister, Anne Cunningham (wife of James Hamilton, Marquis of Hamilton, and grandmother of *Anne Duchess of Hamilton), and her in-laws for lodging and money. Evandale was physically and emotionally abusive to her; she describes being thrown out of his house one night in 1604, naked, ill, and pregnant, and being carried by two women to the local minister’s house for shelter. Evandale had adulterous liaisons, at least one of which produced offspring. Lady Margaret was primary carer to her four children. After Evandale’s death, she became the third wife of Sir James Maxwell of Calderwood. This happy marriage produced six children. Like her will and testament and her letters, the three linked sonnets Lady Margaret sent to Evandale in 1607 reflect her ardent Presbyterianism. Her writings circulated in manuscript; the second sonnet was printed anonymously in the 1635 Scottish Metrical Psalter, to be sung to the tune of Psalm 110. The prominent divine Robert Boyd described her as ‘that virtuous lady, equal, if not beyond any I have known in Scotland’ (Anderson 1851, p. 13). pbg

• NLS: MS 874, ff. 363–84, and MS 906. Anderson, J. (1851) Ladies of the Covenant ; ODNB (2004); Sharpe, C. K. (ed.) (1827) A Pairt of the Life of Lady Margaret Cuninghame . . .; SP, 4, pp. 243–5. CURRAN, Agnes, n. Brennan, MBE,

born Greenock, Renfrewshire, 12 Feb. 1920, died Greenock 29 Sept. 2005. Prison governor, mental nurse. Daughter of Agnes Hendry, and Mark Brennan, shoemaker. Agnes Curran’s first career was as a registered mental nurse and she rose to be deputy matron of Ravenscraig Hospital. She was married first to John Reynolds, a mechanical engineer, but the marriage ended in divorce. In 1952 she married Edward

Curran (d. 2005), a fellow registered mental nurse. She had three children. After twenty-two years in nursing, Agnes Curran changed the direction of her career. She began to work for the prison service and in 1969 she was appointed assistant governor at Gateside prison for women. She remained there until its closure in 1975, when she was transferred as deputy governor to Cornton Vale, a new prison for women. In 1979 Agnes Curran became the first female governor of a male prison when she was appointed governor of Dungavel prison, near Strathaven. Her achievement was marked that year at a ‘women of the year’ luncheon and she was appointed MBE in 1984. She explained her success by saying ‘I don’t see them as murderers, rapists and robbers. I see them as men and I expect them to behave like men’ (The Herald, 11 Oct. 2005). Agnes Curran’s achievement as the first female governor of a male prison became embedded in the history of women’s achievements. When asked by a television interviewer in 1982 what other career she might have chosen if she had her life to live again, she replied: ‘I always wanted to be a surgeon. I knew I had a sensitivity to people but I came to realise that my sensitivity was perhaps not so geared to the flesh as to the mind’ (Women of Today). AJW • The Herald, 11 Oct. 2005 (obit.) and 15 Oct. 2005; The Times, 12 Oct. 2005 (obit.); Women of Today: prison governor, broadcast, ITV, 18 Aug. 1982; *eODNB. CURRIE, Ethel Dobbie, FRSE, born Glasgow 4 Dec. 1899, died Glasgow 24 March 1963. Palaeontologist. Daughter of Elizabeth Allan, and John Currie, measurer. After attending Bellahouston Academy, in 1920 Ethel Currie graduated from the University of Glasgow, where she then took two doctorates. Her career was spent as Curator of the geological collections in the University’s Hunterian Museum, and she retired as Senior Lecturer in 1962, six months before she died. She catalogued thousands of geological specimens, taught students and prepared many educational exhibits. Under the tutelage of the Honorary Curator, Professor J. W. Gregory, she became an authority on echinoids from Africa and southern Asia and with him published a monograph on mammalian fossils from the Scottish Quaternary (Hunterian Museum Geology Monograph 2, 1928). Her work on goniatites (RSE Trans., 62, 1954) proved a key to Scottish Carboniferous stratigraphy. The first

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woman to win the Neill Prize, for her paper on ‘Growth stages in some Jurassic ammonites’ (RSE Trans., 61, 1944), she was also one of the first three women to become FRSE in 1949, and in 1952 became the first woman president of the GSG. Modest about her own achievements, she was unfailingly helpful to students, researchers and colleagues. jrr

(r. 685–705), which included much of what later became southern Scotland. Aldfrith had formerly been a monk on Iona. The strict monastic regimen probably made him lukewarm concerning female companionship, and the marriage was likely uncomfortable for both spouses. It addressed two necessities: production of an heir for Northumbria and intimidation of the Mercians, whose kingdom threatened both Northumbria and Wessex. After the birth of their son Osred in 697, but before Aldfrith’s death in 705, the marriage was dissolved, and Cuthburh retired, possibly first to the monastery of Barking in Essex, and then to Wimborne in her native Wessex. She and Cwenburh her sister founded a ‘double monastery’ (monks and nuns) and presided as abbesses. Cuthburh was c­ ommemorated as a saint, with a feast day on 31 August. jef

• Currie, E. D., Works as above. George, T. N. (1964) Trans. Geol. Soc. Glasgow, 25, ­pp. 98–100; Weir, John (1964) Yearbook RSE, pp. 15–17 (obit.). CUTHBURH, fl. 697–705, born Wessex, died Wimborne, Wessex. Queen of Northumbria, later abbess of Wimborne. Daughter of Cenred of Wessex. Cuthburh was married by Ine her brother, King of Wessex, to Aldfrith, King of Northumbria

• BEHEP; ODNB (2004); Swanton, M. (ed.) (1996) The Anglo-Saxon Chronicles, ‘A’ text, sub anno 718.

D DALHOUSIE, Christian, Countess of see RAMSAY, Christian, Countess of Dalhousie (1786–1839)

born Newhailes, Lothian, 30 Dec. 1765, died Newhailes 9 Jan. 1838. Landowner, diarist. Daughter of Anne Broun of Coalstoun, and Sir David Dalrymple Bt, later Lord Hailes, judge and historian. Christian Dalrymple’s mother died when she was two years old; her father later remarried and her half-sister, Jean, was born in 1777. She grew up in Newhailes House near Musselburgh, where Lord Hailes entertained such figures as David Hume and Samuel Johnson in his magnificent library. He encouraged Christian Dalrymple to explore her literary potential from an early age. From 1798 until her death, she kept a journal which survives, recording the social contacts, household management and travels of a well-off upper-class woman. She inherited the Newhailes estate in 1792, the baronetcy passing to a male cousin. Anecdotal evidence suggests that her father’s will was found as she was preparing to leave the house. Since he had successfully pleaded the descent of Scottish titles to and through women in the case of *Elizabeth, Countess of Sutherland, he presumably thought his daughter capable of running Newhailes. She managed the estate well, including negotiating

DALRYMPLE, Christian,

the sale, lease and purchase of land, using the ice house and building a stable block. Despite initially petitioning against the railway, in 1834 she sold some land to the railway company. On tours round Britain, she visited churches, stately homes, the model community at New Lanark and Walter Scott’s home at Abbotsford. She visited and corresponded with Lady Eleanor Butler and Sarah Ponsonby in Llangollen, North Wales, attended art exhibitions and the theatre, and associated with many notable figures. At home, she entertained frequently, using the library for social ­gatherings. Christian Dalrymple’s journals reveal a way of life and demonstrate her diligence in preserving the essence of the estate. The longneglected Newhailes House was opened to the public in 2002 under the auspices of the National Trust for Scotland. el • NLS: MSS 25454–25499, Corr., journals and miscellaneous papers. Dalrymple, C. [1812] (1914) Private Annals of My Own Time, 1765–1812, H. Dalrymple (ed.). Horrocks, H. for NTS (2004) Newhailes; The Scotsman, 27 May 2002.

baptised Coupar Angus 21 July 1827, died Dunedin, New Zealand, 27 August 1906. Campaigner for girls’

DALRYMPLE, Learmonth White (Leah),

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woman to win the Neill Prize, for her paper on ‘Growth stages in some Jurassic ammonites’ (RSE Trans., 61, 1944), she was also one of the first three women to become FRSE in 1949, and in 1952 became the first woman president of the GSG. Modest about her own achievements, she was unfailingly helpful to students, researchers and colleagues. jrr

(r. 685–705), which included much of what later became southern Scotland. Aldfrith had formerly been a monk on Iona. The strict monastic regimen probably made him lukewarm concerning female companionship, and the marriage was likely uncomfortable for both spouses. It addressed two necessities: production of an heir for Northumbria and intimidation of the Mercians, whose kingdom threatened both Northumbria and Wessex. After the birth of their son Osred in 697, but before Aldfrith’s death in 705, the marriage was dissolved, and Cuthburh retired, possibly first to the monastery of Barking in Essex, and then to Wimborne in her native Wessex. She and Cwenburh her sister founded a ‘double monastery’ (monks and nuns) and presided as abbesses. Cuthburh was c­ ommemorated as a saint, with a feast day on 31 August. jef

• Currie, E. D., Works as above. George, T. N. (1964) Trans. Geol. Soc. Glasgow, 25, ­pp. 98–100; Weir, John (1964) Yearbook RSE, pp. 15–17 (obit.). CUTHBURH, fl. 697–705, born Wessex, died Wimborne, Wessex. Queen of Northumbria, later abbess of Wimborne. Daughter of Cenred of Wessex. Cuthburh was married by Ine her brother, King of Wessex, to Aldfrith, King of Northumbria

• BEHEP; ODNB (2004); Swanton, M. (ed.) (1996) The Anglo-Saxon Chronicles, ‘A’ text, sub anno 718.

D DALHOUSIE, Christian, Countess of see RAMSAY, Christian, Countess of Dalhousie (1786–1839)

born Newhailes, Lothian, 30 Dec. 1765, died Newhailes 9 Jan. 1838. Landowner, diarist. Daughter of Anne Broun of Coalstoun, and Sir David Dalrymple Bt, later Lord Hailes, judge and historian. Christian Dalrymple’s mother died when she was two years old; her father later remarried and her half-sister, Jean, was born in 1777. She grew up in Newhailes House near Musselburgh, where Lord Hailes entertained such figures as David Hume and Samuel Johnson in his magnificent library. He encouraged Christian Dalrymple to explore her literary potential from an early age. From 1798 until her death, she kept a journal which survives, recording the social contacts, household management and travels of a well-off upper-class woman. She inherited the Newhailes estate in 1792, the baronetcy passing to a male cousin. Anecdotal evidence suggests that her father’s will was found as she was preparing to leave the house. Since he had successfully pleaded the descent of Scottish titles to and through women in the case of *Elizabeth, Countess of Sutherland, he presumably thought his daughter capable of running Newhailes. She managed the estate well, including negotiating

DALRYMPLE, Christian,

the sale, lease and purchase of land, using the ice house and building a stable block. Despite initially petitioning against the railway, in 1834 she sold some land to the railway company. On tours round Britain, she visited churches, stately homes, the model community at New Lanark and Walter Scott’s home at Abbotsford. She visited and corresponded with Lady Eleanor Butler and Sarah Ponsonby in Llangollen, North Wales, attended art exhibitions and the theatre, and associated with many notable figures. At home, she entertained frequently, using the library for social ­gatherings. Christian Dalrymple’s journals reveal a way of life and demonstrate her diligence in preserving the essence of the estate. The longneglected Newhailes House was opened to the public in 2002 under the auspices of the National Trust for Scotland. el • NLS: MSS 25454–25499, Corr., journals and miscellaneous papers. Dalrymple, C. [1812] (1914) Private Annals of My Own Time, 1765–1812, H. Dalrymple (ed.). Horrocks, H. for NTS (2004) Newhailes; The Scotsman, 27 May 2002.

baptised Coupar Angus 21 July 1827, died Dunedin, New Zealand, 27 August 1906. Campaigner for girls’

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education. Daughter of Jessie Taylor, and William Dalrymple, ironmongery merchant. Schooled at Madras College, St Andrews, and fluent in French through European travel, Leah Dalrymple always believed her education inadequate and spoke of her ‘hopeless yearning for mental culture’ (Otago Daily Times, 17 Dec. 1896, supp.). After her mother died in 1840, she cared for her seven younger siblings. In 1853, the family moved to Otago, near Dunedin, New Zealand, settled from Scotland just five years before. There she kept house for her father and three siblings on their farm. She helped establish the first Sunday School in the district. The discovery of gold in 1861 brought wealth, ­population and education to Otago. When a boys’ high school opened in Dunedin in 1863, Leah Dalrymple began a seven-year campaign for a high school for girls. Imbued equally with determination and decorum, she ­gathered together a women’s committee, approached the Provincial Council, and wrote around 800 letters to British educationalists, accepting Frances Buss’s dictum that girls’ education should ‘in all essential points . . . be assimilated to that of boys’ (Buss to Dalrymple, ODT, 10 June 1869). Otago Girls’ High School, the first state secondary school for girls in New Zealand, opened in 1871. Leah Dalrymple then transferred her lobbying skills to petitioning for the ‘admittance of ladies’ to the new University of Otago. In August 1871, Otago became the first university in Australasia to admit women. An early advocate of the Kindergarten movement on the Froebel model of ‘natural education’, Leah Dalrymple petitioned parliament for its introduction in 1879. When she moved to Feilding in 1881 to be near her brother, she joined the WCTU ­campaign for women’s suffrage, achieved in 1893. DP • Hocken Library, Dunedin: (HL) Univ. of Otago, Council Minutes, 1871; Letters and Papers, 1871; HL: Otago Provincial Council, Votes and Proceedings, 1864, 1865, 1869; Education Reports, 1869–72. Grimshaw, P. (1972) Women’s Suffrage in New Zealand; Otago Daily Times, 10 June 1869, 17 Dec. 1896; Page, D. (1990) ‘Dalrymple, Learmonth White’, DNZB, vol. I; Thompson, G. (1921) History of Otago University; Trotter, M. (1983) William and Isabella Trotter [private, Invercargill, Trotter Family]; Wallis, E. (1972) A Most Rare Vision.

Campbell, daughter of the 4th Duke of Argyll, and Henry Seymour Conway, Field-marshal. Anne Conway spent much of her youth in the care of her father’s cousin, Horace Walpole, who later became an advocate of her talent. She moved in intellectual and aristocratic circles with her mother, who retained her title, Countess of Ailesbury, from her former marriage, and her halfsister, Lady Mary Bruce. In 1767, Anne Conway married Hon. John Damer (1743–76), from whom she later separated, and she was widowed without children in 1776, when he shot himself after accruing large gambling debts. She revived an interest in sculpture, producing works which include the Portland-stone heads of Thame and Isis on Henley Bridge, a statue of George III (Register House, Edinburgh), and a bust of Sir Joseph Banks (BM). Angelika Kauffmann and Sir Joshua Reynolds painted her portrait and Giuseppe Ceracchi sculpted her statue in marble. She spent much time at Inveraray Castle in the company of her Campbell relatives and others, including David Hume, who was for a time secretary to her father. In 1797 Anne Damer inherited Walpole’s gothic mansion, Strawberry Hill, where she acted in private theatricals. She also provided a story from her ancestry which *Joanna Baillie dramatised as The Family Legend, the Highland play which launched the new Theatre Royal, Edinburgh, in 1810. She published Belmour, a novel (1801), and was identified as the basis for the eccentric character Lady Maclaughlan in *Susan Ferrier’s Marriage (1818). Anne Damer travelled widely, meeting Nelson in Italy in 1798 and Napoleon in Paris in 1802 during the Peace of Amiens; in 1815, Napoleon gave her a diamond-studded snuff box with his portrait (BM). There was contemporary speculation regarding friendships with women, and her name is often included in modern studies of ­homosexuality in the 18th century. el • Damer, A. S. (2011) Belmour, modern edition with introduction by J. D. Gross (ed.). Donoghue, E. (1993) Passions Between Women; Gunnis, R. (ed.) (1968) Dictionary of British Sculptors 1660–1851; Lindsay, I. G. and Cosh, M. (1973) Inveraray and the Dukes of Argyll; Noble, P. (1908) Anne Seymour Damer; ODNB (2004); Yarrington, A. (1997) ‘The female Pygmalion’, Sculpture Jour., 1, pp. 32–44.

n. Carter, born Secrole, India, 19 May 1832, died Ashburton 21 April 1906. Education campaigner. Daughter of Helen Gray, and Major Henry Carter.

DANIELL, Madeline Margaret,

n. Conway, born Sevenoaks, Kent, 8 Nov. 1749, died London 28 May 1828. Sculptor and writer. Daughter of Lady Caroline

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Educated mainly at the Edinburgh Institution for the Education of Young Ladies, Madeline Carter married Charles Daniell (1833–55), a cavalry officer who died at Lahore in 1855, leaving her with a son. Returning to Scotland, she helped to form the ELEA, campaigning for women’s right to higher education. She hosted its inaugural committee meeting, and as honorary secretary, from 1866 to 1869, she provided active support to the president, *Mary Crudelius, who was an invalid. Madeline Daniell undertook much of the ELEA’s negotation with sympathetic academics, and was also a founding honorary secretary of the company which established St Leonards School at St Andrews. Her sister, Helen Evans (1834–1903), mother of *Helen Archdale (1876–1949), was one of ‘the Edinburgh Seven’ who joined *Sophia Jex-Blake in her attempt to enter medical school at Edinburgh. Madeline Daniell’s later life was spent mostly in England: from 1887 to 1889 she was close friend and companion to the poet Constance Naden (1858–89). A Liberal in politics, she remained an active campaigner for women’s rights. tb • Daniell, M. (1890) ‘Memoir’ in Naden, C. C. W., Induction and Deduction (and other essays), R. Lewins ed. Burton, K. (ed.) (1879) A Memoir of Mrs Crudelius; Grant, J. et al. (1927) St Leonards School; *ODNB (2004) (also Edinburgh Seven). DARE, Margaret Marie, born Newport on Tay 4 Feb. 1902, died Edinburgh 11 Feb. 1976. Cellist, composer, teacher. Daughter of Elizabeth Lundin Brown, and Joseph Dare, company secretary. After studies at the GSMD, London, with Warwick Evans, J. E. R. Teague, W. H. Squire and Benjamin Dale, Marie Dare was awarded the Gold Medal for instrumentalists and the Sir Landon Ronald and Guildhall composition prizes. Her career as a soloist began in the First World War Victory Concert at the Albert Hall, in the presence of Queen Alexandra. She worked in Paris with cello virtuoso Paul Bazelaire and, back in England, won the RCM Society of Women Musicians composition prize for her Piano Trio in F (1939), subsequently making a debut recital at the Aeolian Hall, presenting her own works. Other concerts followed in Vienna and Budapest. During the Second World War she served in the WRNS and afterwards joined the Reid Orchestra in Edinburgh as principal cellist. For many years she was a member of the Scottish Trio with Wight Henderson and Horace Fellows, and was professor of cello at the RSAMD.

Marie Dare’s earliest known works include Romance (1921) and Le Lac (1927), both for violoncello and piano, and Phantasy String Quintet (1933). She later wrote principally for string instruments (quartets, chamber ensemble) and sacred and secular vocal works for orchestra. Works include compositions for cello quartet: Chant (1957); Aria (1958); A Day Dream; Elegy and Rustic Dance (n.d.), which she recorded with fellow cellists Antonia Butler, Helen Just and Olga Hegedus; Scottish Rhapsody for strings (1973); Red Robert MacIntosh Suite (1956); Raasay (n.d.); Three Highland Sketches for string orchestra: Mist on the Bens – Sea Loch – Strathspey and Reel (n.d.); and The White Moth, a ballet suite with libretto based on an old Scottish folk story. Many of her compositions are still unpublished and in manuscript form at the SMIC, Glasgow. Of particular interest are works for children: The Penny Wedding: a ballet (n.d.); The Pied Piper of Hamelin (n.d.); and Thumbeline (1961/2) with a libretto by Margaret Lyford Pyke from the tale by Hans Christian Andersen. pac • Papers of the Society of Women Musicians (1911–72), database at RCM, London; SMIC, Glasgow (MS works). Dare, M., Works as above. Cohen, A. I. (1987, 2nd edn.) International Encyclopedia of Women Composers; Kay, E. (1975, 7th edn.) International Who’s Who in Music; Kenneson, C. (1974) Bibliography of Cello Ensemble Music; www.cello.org

n. Dryer, born Kilmarnock 20 March 1919, died Edinburgh 13 Nov. 1995. Novelist and short story writer. Daughter of Lilian McFarlane, and Oliver Dryer, Presbyterian ­minister. Elspeth Dryer and her sister spent their early childhood in Surrey while their father worked for the International Peace Movement in London. When Elspeth was nine, the family returned to Scotland and lived in Lasswade near Edinburgh. She was educated at George Watson’s Ladies’ College, Edinburgh, and spent two years at the University of Edinburgh, where she won a prize for philosophy. She attended Edinburgh College of Art (1938–42) then taught painting in schools in the Borders and Aberdeen. After her marriage to the philosopher George Elder Davie in 1944, they moved to Belfast where he was a university lecturer (1945–69), before settling permanently in Edinburgh. They had one daughter. Elspeth Davie began to write regularly while in Belfast and her first novel, Providings, was published in 1965. She published four novels and five

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volumes of short stories, of which The High Tide Talker (1976) won the Katherine Mansfield Prize in 1978. Her art training is evident in the visual quality of her writing. Her work is notable also for its restraint, conveying contemplation rather than action, with frequent voids or silences, deliberately unrealistic dialogue, and a recurrent theme of travel. She is sometimes criticised for detachment and lack of warmth in her writing, but more often it is recognised that she is depicting the communication gap in everyday life and the alienation and neuroses of modern society. marb • NLS: Acc. 10631, MS 19710. Unpublished MSS and diaries. Davie, E., Works as above and see Bibls below. DLB Gale, vol. 139 (Bibl.); ECSWW; HSWW (Bibl.); ODNB (2004); The Scotsman, 15 Nov. 1995 (obit.).

n. MacDonald [May Moxon], born Glasgow 9 Oct. 1906, died Glasgow 26 Nov. 1996. Dancer and supplier of dance troupes. Daughter of Martha McCandlish, and John MacDonald, crane driver. Born into a theatrical family, Euphemia MacDonald made her first stage appearance in 1917 with her mother and brothers as the ‘MacLeans’ at the Casino, one of Glasgow’s cine-variety venues. They toured Scotland, resulting in an interrupted education spread over 30 different schools. When the family act ended, she continued on her own, then as part of her own troupe of dancers, under the name May Moxon (thought to be her grandmother’s). In 1937, she married William Edward Davison, a waiter, and they had one son. A serious leg injury from a car accident in 1934 had ended her dancing career, but May Moxon was determined to stay in the theatre business, and offered to form a troupe for the Galt variety agency. After the success of this first troupe, she went on to supply dancers to theatres across Scotland, notably for a 100-week run at the Glasgow Metropole. This was the hey-day of the ‘resident’ variety era, when a group of chorus girls was seen as the backbone of the show. May Moxon became a leading supplier of dancers (others were Adeline Calder, Agnes Campbell and Grace Dryburgh) with possibly as many as 1825 ‘girls’ on her books, 60 or 70 at any one time and six to ten dancers per venue. The many costume changes required came from her vast wardrobe. She advertised in local papers: ‘When you put an advert in asking for dancers, you would get as many as you wanted, so many girls were wanting to go on the stage. When I think of the girls of years

DAVISON, Euphemia,

ago, what great wee workers they were’ (Devlin 1991, pp.63–4). The memories of ‘Moxon girls’ r­ e-iterate the themes of hard work, basic pay and conditions, and camaraderie; ‘Sometimes there was four or five in a bed. That sounds ridiculous, but it’s true. That happened at Dunfermline, to get it cheap. To get digs for 30 shillings or 25 shillings you shared a bed with four’ (May Morrison). With the decline of variety, May Moxon retired in the 1970s. fb • Devlin, V. (1991) Kings, Queens and People’s Palaces: an oral history of the Scottish variety theatre 1920–1970; Irving, G. (1977) The Good Auld Days; Tudor, F. (1985) ‘The dancing years’, The Scots Magazine, April. Private information: May Morrison (former Moxon dancer). DAWSON, Ellen, m. Kanki, born Barrhead, Glasgow, 14 Dec. 1900, died Charlotte Harbor, Florida, USA, 17 April 1967. Weaver, trade unionist. Daughter of Annie Halford, weaver, and Patrick Dawson, labourer. Ellen Dawson lived in Barrhead, probably working in a local textile mill from 1914, until December 1919 when her family moved to Shawforth, north of Rochdale in Lancashire, where she was a spinner in a local mill. In 1921, she and her elder brother were the first of several members of her family to migrate to the United States, settling in New Jersey. A weaver at the Botany Worsted Mill, she was a leader in the 1926 strike of 16,000 Passaic area textile workers and was a prominent organiser in the 1928 New Bedford, Massachusetts, strike of 20,000 workers. From 1928 she was an organiser of the National Textile Workers Union, an American Communist labour union representing unskilled textile workers, primarily women and immigrants. Ellen Dawson was the first woman elected to a national leadership position in an American textile union when she became vice president at the founding convention that year. In 1929, she co-directed the famous strike at the Loray Mill in Gastonia, North Carolina, which drew national media attention when the local police chief and a prominent woman striker were killed. In retaliation, the US Labor Department arrested her and sought her d ­ eportation. Represented by the American Civil Liberties Union, she was acquitted and the Federal judge ordered Labor Department officials to explain why they sought to punish her for her political beliefs. She married Louis Kanki, a labourer from Hungary, in 1935. Although no longer an activist, she worked in the textile ­industry until shortly before her death in 1967. dlm

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DENCE • SS Cedric Manifest, May 9, 1921, Ellis Island Passenger Records. Foner, P. S. (1980) Women and the American Labor Movement from World War I to the Present; Georgianna, D. (1993) The Strike of ’28; Mullan, D. (2010) Strike! The Radical Insurrections of Ellen Dawson; Salmond, J. A. (1995) Gastonia 1929; The (New York) World, 24 October 1929; The (Passaic) Herald-News, 18 April 1967 (obit.); Vorse, M. H. (1927) The Passaic Textile Strike 1926–1927.

born Greenock 23 April 1909, died Edinburgh 17 Jan. 1987. Sculptor. Daughter of Elizabeth Watt, and Duncan Dempster, sugar refiner. Orphaned, Elizabeth Dempster moved to Edinburgh to be near her guardian, the Very Rev. Dr Charles Warr, and to study sculpting (1930). She enrolled at ECA, joining an illustrious group of instructors and students, including Alexander Carrick, Norman Forrest, Hew Lorimer and Tom Whalen, with whom she maintained collaborative links thereafter. After further training at Regent Street Polytechnic and the Munich Academy, she exhibited at the RSA from 1935. Her first commission was the large, silvered Seahorse for the Clyde Navigational Trust (shown at the 1938 Empire Exhibition, Glasgow). Like her contemporaries, she favoured a spare, Romanesque style softened by fluent lines; her interpretation of subjects was original, verging on mystical. Bas-relief depictions of The Four Elements (1951), occupying the quadrants of a Latin cross, were an unexpected theme for the War Memorial Chapel in St Giles’ Cathedral. Her roundels on the NLS façade (1956) are unconventional evocations of the learned disciplines represented by Lorimer’s allegorical figures below them. For the Royal Scots Memorial, she supplied straightforward historical images. A proponent of direct carving, she executed the NLS reliefs in situ and produced three large oak figures for the organ-screen in St Giles’ unaided. Elizabeth Dempster (ARSA 1960) was remembered by colleagues as combining deep reserve with a delightful sense of humour and profound loyalty. Other works survive in RSA and National Galleries collections. shh

DEMPSTER, Elizabeth Strachan,

DEANS, Charlotte, n. Lowes, m1 Johnston, m2 Deans, born Wigton, Cumbria, 1 Sept. 1768, died

Bothergate, Carlisle, 14 March 1859. Strolling player. Daughter of Alice Howard, and Henry Lowes, attorney. Charlotte Lowes was one of three surviving children. Her respectable, comfortable life ended abruptly when she eloped with William Morel Johnston, an actor in Naylor’s Company of Comedians, whom she saw performing in a barn in Wigton in 1787. They married in Gretna Green in August that year, and she became an actor in his company. The life was hard, not least because of the disreputable nature of the acting profession and her frequent pregnancies: during this marriage, she gave birth to 12 children. William Johnston died in 1801, and Charlotte returned to the stage with Mr Hobson’s Company of Comedians, then in Penrith. In 1803, she married fellow-actor (and nascent manager) Thomas Deans (1781– c. 1859), several years her junior. They set out with four of her surviving children for an engagement in Montrose, where a new northern circuit was being developed. When the Montrose managers failed to pay, the family quit, and worked their way south through Fife and Lanarkshire, performing the standard mixed bill of musical numbers, burlesqued Shakespeare and recitations wherever possible, generally travelling by foot and performing in barns and halls. Charlotte Deans’s thirteenth child was baptised in Lanark on 12 February 1805. She had a further four children with Deans, while travelling and performing across central Scotland, the Scottish Borders and the north of England. She toured the Borders between 1808 and 1811, and went on acting into her late 60s. Some of her children also pursued acting careers. Charlotte Deans’s memoirs, published in 1837, give distinctive insight into the life of the strolling player. Rona Munro’s play The Maiden Stone (1995) is partly inspired by her life. as • Marshall, F. (ed.) (1984) A Travelling Actress in the North and Scotland. A Reprint of the Memoirs of the Life of Mrs Charlotte Deans, 1768–1859.

• RSA Archives (Members’ Files): Dean Gallery, Edinburgh. DSAA.

MBE, born Teddington, Middlesex, 14 June 1901, died Perth 23 August 1966. Actor and theatre manager. Daughter of Annie Eleanor Searle, and Ernest Martin Dence, brassfounder and company director. Marjorie Dence discovered her theatrical vocation while studying at the University of London. She joined the university dramatic society, where she met the actor David Steuart. Their relationship was professional rather than romantic, but it was a close and lifelong partnership. In 1934 they were both members of Lena Ashwell’s Greater London Theatre Company. In a conversation about starting a repertory theatre,

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Steuart ­suggested Perth as an ideal location. By coincidence, shortly afterwards, Perth Theatre was advertised for sale in The Stage. Ernest Dence agreed to buy it for £4,000 and appointed his daughter as manager. Marjorie Dence and David Steuart contributed £1,000 of their own money to refurbish the theatre, and engaged a company. On 23 Sept. 1935, their first season began successfully with a performance of The Rose without a Thorn by Clifford Bax, and they went on to present a further 18 plays in weekly repertory. With the outbreak of war in September 1939, Marjorie Dence rose to the occasion: the actors moved into the theatre, sleeping in dressingrooms and the coffee-bar, and took over all the non-playing functions, such as box office, cleaning and scene shifting. Everyone shared meals in the theatre and any profit was divided equally at the end of a week. Under her management, the Perth company not only survived but extended its activities. Marjorie Dence was a highly respected figure in Perth, becoming a JP. She was made MBE in 1952. Her annual garden party, given at the beginning of each season, was a popular event with the Theatre Club. The last of her parties took place in August 1966, just two days before her sudden and untimely death. Her will stated that the theatre was to be sold to the city of Perth for £5,000, exactly the initial outlay. There is a plaque to Marjorie Dence at the entrance to Perth Theatre, opposite the box-office. dc • Boutcher, R. and Kemp, W. G. (1975) The Theatre in Perth; Campbell, D. (1966) Playing for Scotland; Hutchison, D. (1977) The Modern Scottish Theatre ; ODNB (2004). Private information: Helen Murdoch.

fl. 685, born Pictland. Queen and mother of kings. The fact that Der-Ilei, whose sons Bridei (697–706) and Naiton (706-24) were Pictish over-kings, was their mother rather than their father has only recently come to light, though the possibility has been acknowledged for some time. Der-Ilei apparently had two husbands: Dargart mac Finguine, a dynast of Cenél Comgaill in Cowal, who died in 685, and an otherwise unknown Drostan, apparently a dynast of the Pictish kingdom of Atholl. The chronologies of the children of these marriages suggest that Dargart was her first husband, and Drostan of Atholl her second. Pictish history in the first third of the eighth century is dominated by the activities and

DER-ILEI,

struggles of (and sometimes between) Der-Ilei’s sons, but she herself remains enigmatic. Sketchy though the details of her life are, they show the crucial role that high-status women could play as brides crossing political and cultural divisions. jef • Anderson, A. O. and Anderson, M. O. (eds) (1961) Adomnan’s Life of Columba; Clancy, T. O. (2004) ‘Philosopher-King: Nechtan mac Der-Ilei’, Scot. Hist. Rev., 83.2, pp. 125–49. DERWENT, Lavinia

see DODD, Elizabeth (1909–89)

DEVINE, Rachel, n. Blackley, born Dundee 13 Feb. 1875, died Dundee 13 April 1960. Weaver and trade union leader. Daughter of Rachel McClellan, and John Blackley, yarn dresser. Rachel Blackley married John Devine in 1898. A founding member of the Dundee and District Jute and Flax Workers’ Union in 1906, she served the union for more than 30 years. Women in that union (unlike others) were encouraged to participate at all levels, which was a significant development in an industry employing large numbers of women. As Rachel Devine wryly observed at a joint trade union national women’s conference in 1929, ‘the difficulty in Dundee was not getting their women to speak, but in getting them to speak and to hold their tongues at the right time’ (Lamb Collection). Rachel Devine was first elected to the union executive as a factory representative in 1909. Her criticism of the union’s full-time secretary resulted in her removal as a representative four years later, but she returned to the executive in 1915 and was active in rallying union support for the Dundee rent strikes. In 1923, she was elected vice-president and became president the following year, and one of the union’s leading wages and conditions negotiators. After being replaced as president by Jeannie Spence in 1930, she served a second fouryear period as vice-president. In 1938, she became a trustee of the union. In 1939, she gave evidence for the union at an enquiry about conditions for employees under 16 years old. She was a capable campaigner for working women, with a reputation for combativeness both towards their employers and union leaders. GRS

• Dundee City Archive and Record Centre: GD/JF/1-GD/ JF/21, Dundee and District Union of Jute and Flax Workers minute books, 1906–66; Dundee Central Library: Lamb Collection. Dundee Courier & Advertiser, 25 May 1939; 15 April 1960; Gordon, E. (1991) Women and the Labour Movement in

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DICKSON WRIGHT Scotland 1850–1914; *ODNB (2004); Walker, W. (1979) Juteopolis: Dundee and its textile workers 1885–1923. DICK, Beetty, born Dalkeith 1693, died Dalkeith 1773. Town crier. The office of town crier was sometimes performed in small Scottish burghs by ‘some old matron’ (Kay 1878, p. 365). Beetty Dick was crier in Dalkeith in the mid-18th century. Wearing her distinctive hooded cap (toy) and wielding the ‘clap’ – a plain wooden trencher and spoon – she went the rounds of the town nightly, calling out the arrival of fresh fish, the loss or theft of articles, the availability of hot tripe, and any other intelligence, for the price of one penny per item. Said to be a great favourite with ‘the younger portion of the town’ (ibid.) who greeted her with acclamation, Beetty Dick never married, and was buried in the Old Churchyard. She was succeeded by a further three female criers, who used handbells, before the magistrates adopted a drum as being ‘more dignified’ (ibid.). sr

• Kay, J. (1878 edn.) A Series of Original Portraits and Caricature Etchings, vol. 2, pp. 365–67.

born Edinburgh 21 Dec. 1921, died London 9 Oct. 1994. Cellist and music teacher. Daughter of Marjorie Balfour Lowe, and J. Douglas Dickson, WS, lawyer. Joan Dickson was educated at the RCM, London (LRAM 1945) and studied with Ivor James, with Pierre Fournier in Paris in 1947, and with Enrico Mainardi in Rome, Salzburg and Lucerne (1948–51). A professor both at the RCM from 1967 and at the RSAMD from 1954 to 1981, she also taught chamber music and gave many memorable recitals. As a soloist, she appeared at the London Proms, playing Rubbra’s Soliloquy and the Hindemith Cello Concerto. A distinguished figure in chamber music, she was a founder member of the New Edinburgh Quartet (1953–8), which she left to join the Scottish Trio. She also formed a duo with her sister, Hester. Works were composed for them by Leighton, Wilson and Dunlop, while concerti were composed for Joan by Frank Spedding and David Dorward. She later worked closely with pianist Joyce Rathbone, as both performers and teachers. As a teacher, Joan Dickson’s influence was widespread and influential: pupils included Jacqueline du Pré, Murray Welsh, the Prince of Wales and Richard Harwood. Her insistence on technical accomplishment was never allowed to

DICKSON, Katherine Joan Balfour,

inhibit musicality, and her own performances were often inspired. She could be forceful, even intimidating, but was always open to new ideas. Latterly, she devoted much energy to the European String Teachers’ Association. David Donaldson recalled painting her portrait in the Mackintosh studio at the GSA: ‘In one of the most beautiful settings Scotland could produce, I was painting a six-foot picture of a woman wearing a long green dress playing some of the greatest music in the world. It was magic . . . in some ways Joan Dickson was the ultimate’ (Smith 1996, p. 68). Joan Dickson was MMus (Durham) and was awarded the Cobbett Medal 1965 for services to chamber music. jp • RSAMD Alumni Association, Newsletter 9, 1996, p. 30; 12, 1997/98, p. 8. Smith, W. G. (1996) David Donaldson, Painter and Limner to her Majesty The Queen in Scotland; The Independent, 11 Oct. 1994 (obit.). Private information: Hester Dickson (sister); personal ­knowledge. DICKSON WRIGHT, Clarissa Theresa Philomena Aileen Mary Josephine Agnes Elsie Trilby Louise Esmerelda, born London 24 June 1947, died

Edinburgh 15 March 2014. Cookery expert, television personality. Daughter of Molly Bath, Australian heiress, and Arthur Dickson Wright, surgeon, both of Scottish descent. After convent school in Hove, Clarissa Dickson Wright read law, becoming the youngest barrister in England at 21. That career ended a few years later, and she developed a serious long-term drink problem, which lasted until she undertook treatment, totally abstaining from the age of 40. Simultaneously she had run through a large inheritance from her mother, by high living. Launching herself into a second career – catering, cooking, and writing – she moved to near Musselburgh in 1993 and installed the Cooks’ Bookshop in West Bow, Edinburgh (1996–2004). In the mid-1990s, BBC producer Patricia Llewelyn recruited her with Jennifer Paterson for the unconventional but very popular cookery programme Two Fat Ladies, which ran for three full seasons. Thanks to this fame, she was elected the first woman rector of Aberdeen University and served an unusual two terms, 1998–2004, cementing her link to her adopted country. Larger than life in every way, three times ­bankrupt, Clarissa Dickson Wright was well-­ connected, opinionated, and forthright in her 113

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views, supporting hunting and the Countryside Alliance. Her autobiographical writings are racy, though not perhaps entirely reliable. SR • Dickson Wright, C. (2007) Spilling the Beans, (2009) Rifling Through My Drawers: my life in a year. The Guardian, 20 March 2014 (obit.), The Herald, 18 March 2014 (obits).

fl. 1644, died Isle of Luing. Poet and songwriter. Diorbhail nic a’ Bhruthainn composed the song ‘Alasdair a Laoigh mo chéille’ (Alasdair, love of my heart) in praise of Alexander MacDonald or Alasdair Mac Colla, Montrose’s general. This is the only extant composition with an ascription to her, although we know that she composed many more. Internal evidence dates the song to late 1643 or early 1644. An ardent Jacobite, she reserved her sharpest satire for the Clan Campbell. In fact, the anti-Campbell sentiments in this song are every bit as strong as, if not stronger than, the royalist or anti-Covenant views expressed. She was buried in the old churchyard in Luing. af

DIORBHAIL NIC A’ BHRUTHAINN (Dorothy Brown),

• MacKenzie, J. (1904) Sàr-obair nam Bàrd Gaelach, p. 63; Thomson, D. S. (1994) The Companion to Gaelic Scotland, p. 213.

n. Douglas, born Kinmount, Cummertrees, Peebleshire 24 May 1855, died Glen Stuart, Dumfriesshire, 7 Nov. 1905. Traveller, writer. Daughter of Caroline Clayton, and Archibald William Douglas, 8th Marquess of Queensberry. A twin, youngest of six, Florrie Douglas was born into an ancient but disaster-prone Scottish family, based at Kinmount. Her father died by accident or suicide in 1858; her twin killed himself in 1891; another brother died on the Matterhorn in 1865, and the 9th Marquess, father of Lord Alfred Douglas, was the defendant in the Oscar Wilde case (1895). In the 1860s, her mother converted to Catholicism and fled abroad with the twins for two years, visiting every capital city in Europe. Convent-educated, Florrie Douglas’s true love was the outdoors: travel, horse-riding, swimming. In 1875, she married the like-minded, handsome but otherwise unremarkable Sir Alexander Beaumont (Beau) Dixie, Bt. (1851–1924). Two months after the birth of their second child, in 1878, Lady Dixie set off for South America with her husband, two brothers, and a friend in tow, determined to be the first white woman to visit remote regions. Across Patagonia (1880) led to her dispatch as Morning Post

correspondent to South Africa and another book, In Defence of Zululand (1882). She later championed home rule for both Ireland and Scotland, though opposing Land League policy in the former, and claimed to be the victim of an unconfirmed attack by ‘Fenians’ at Windsor. In the mid-1880s, she and Beau moved permanently to Glen Stuart on the family estate, from where ‘books continued to pour out’ (Roberts 1981, p. 274). Her advanced views caused her to be thought eccentric and a class traitor: she favoured complete equality for men and women: ‘give all human beings fair play and Nature will select her own aristocracy’ (Izra 1905, quoted ibid., p. 275). She grew to hate blood sports (having once hunted big game) and turned vegetarian. Among other pursuits, she became a member of the Rational Dress society and wrote for the Agnostic Journal; with the Scots Patriots, protested against the appellation ‘Edward VII’ on the King’s accession; and presided over a ladies football team, ‘the ideal exercise for women’. ‘Hard as nails or even a little harder’ according to Lady Warwick (ibid., p. 276), Florence Dixie later suffered from arthritis and died aged 48. The inconsolable Beau remarried. sr • Dixie, F. C., Works as above, and see Bibl. HSWW (Bibl.); eODNB (revised entry); Roberts, B. (1981) The Mad Bad Line: the family of Lord Alfred Douglas.

DIXIE, Florence Caroline (Florrie), Lady,

DOCHERTY, Mary, born Cowdenbeath 27 April 1908, died Cowdenbeath 2 Feb. 2000. Communist activist and writer. Daughter of Janet Todd, and William Docherty, miner. One of three girls, Mary Docherty had firsthand knowledge of the poverty endemic in mining areas in West Fife and of the ignorance and prejudice with which miners’ families were treated. Unemployed as a result of his political activities, her father was reduced to selling firewood round the doors. She started in domestic service at 14 and worked in a factory before becoming a full-time CP worker. Involved in politics from an early age, she joined the CP at 18 in the aftermath of the General Strike and remained a dedicated member for over 70 years, campaigning for better conditions alongside Willie Gallacher and Alex and Abe Moffatt. She began a local children’s section of the CP and organised strikes and demonstrations. During a visit to the Soviet Union in 1929, she spent three months in a sanatorium where she was cured of tuberculosis. She retained an enormous love for the country despite its political breakdown, and Lenin was her ultimate hero. A Miner’s Lass (1991) gives an insight into the poverty and lack of opportunity

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of working-class women of her generation. Her second book, ‘Auld Bob’, A Man in a Million (1996), was a tribute to her guide and mentor, Bob Selkirk, a local councillor and activist. Mary Docherty retired from active political life at 60 but with the publication of her books she was once more in demand as a speaker and until shortly before her death, continued to take part in International Women’s Day events. At 91, she was one of the principal speakers at Red Fife, a celebration of the kingdom’s contribution to political life. lk • Docherty M., Works as above. Central Fife Times, 10 Feb. 2000 (obit.).

MBE, born Overton Bush Farm, Borders, 23 Feb. 1909, died Glasgow 26 Nov. 1989. Children’s writer and broadcaster. Daughter of Bessie Lamb, and John Dodd, farmer. Born in the Cheviot Hills, the middle child of five, Elizabeth Dodd attended Edgerton primary school and Jedburgh Grammar School, before keeping house for a minister brother. When he married, she moved to Glasgow to work for Collins Publishers, where she stayed for 30 years, reaching a senior position. She wrote and edited children’s books for Collins, adopting the pseudonym ‘Lavinia Derwent’ for these, as well as for her own work in print, radio and TV. During the Second World War, she worked part-time in a Forces’ canteen. Meanwhile, wartime Scotland was cheered by her ‘Tammy Troot’ radio stories, superbly read by actor Willie Joss on BBC Children’s Hour. The lovable if conceited hero – ‘Ah’m a clever wee troot!’ – became a household name, featuring in a newspaper cartoon strip and later in books. She became a full-time writer in the 1960s, after the success of Macpherson (1961), the first of a 13-title series of children’s books about a Glasgow errand-boy. In the 1970s, she wrote and presented the STV series Teatime Tales. The four-book Sula series of novels (1969–76), set on a fictional Hebridean island, was filmed on Tiree for BBC children’s television. Seven volumes of memoirs, published 1975–88, provide a lively account of her childhood and early career. Based in Glasgow, she had a wide circle of friends, was a member of the Soroptimists and several writers’ organisations, and was the first woman president of Scottish PEN. A kenspeckle figure on the Scottish literary scene, she dressed ‘. . . in vivid, stylish colours which defied any attempts at co-ordination yet resulted in individualistic glamour’ (Scotsman 1989). Her children’s

DODD, Elizabeth [Lavinia Derwent],

books are notable for the liveliness and humour evident in her personality, and The Adventures of Tammy Troot (1975) and the Sula series have attained near-classic status. marb • Mitchell Library, Glasgow: Archive. Derwent, L., Works as above, and (1975) A Breath of Border Air, (1988) Beyond the Borders. See also HSWW (Select Bibl.). eODNB; The Scotsman, 28 Nov. 1989 (obit.); Strickland, G. (1978) ‘Drawn from memory’, Radio Times, 4–10 March, pp. 15, 17. DODS, Mary Diana [David Lyndsay, Walter Sholto Douglas], born c. 1790, probably Scotland, died

c. 1830. Writer, cross-dresser. Reputed daughter of George Douglas, 15th Earl of Morton (mother unknown). Mary Diana Dods and her sister, Georgiana Dods Carter, also reputedly the daughter of George Douglas, were raised by Douglas in London and at Dalmahoy House, Ratho. Exceptionally intelligent, Mary was well-read and fluent in French and German. When her father married in 1814, he gave Mary and her sister allowances of £100 each, continued as annuities on his death in 1824. In 1821, the sisters briefly ran a girls’ school in London, giving language and piano lessons. That year, Mary Diana Dods began her literary career as ‘David Lyndsay’, publishing Dramas of the Ancient World followed by essays in Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine and short stories in London annuals. A second book, Tales of the Wild and the Wonderful, appeared in 1825. Though Blackwood’s rejected further submissions, when in 1826 she sent in work under the name of ‘Sholto Douglas’, it was published. She may have initially used the name ‘Walter Sholto Douglas’ for publishing purposes, but around 1825 she formed a relationship with Isabella Robinson (c. 1810–69), the daughter of Joshua Robinson, a London builder. When the unmarried Isabella, independent and strikingly beautiful, gave birth to a daughter c. 1826–7, she and Mary named the child Adeline Douglas and established Isabella as Mrs Douglas. In August 1827, Mary Diana Dods donned men’s clothing and transformed herself into Mr Walter Sholto Douglas, with wife and child. Their friend Mary Shelley aided this charade and secured false passports for them to travel to Paris, where the couple entered Anglo-French society and she successfully passed as a man. The story of Mary Diana Dods and her guises was a secret until 1980, when uncovered by Betty T. Bennett. 115

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Mary Diana Dods hoped in her male persona to enter the diplomatic corps but was disappointed. So, too, was she disappointed in Isabella Robinson, who openly flirted with men and had a love affair. In 1829, as Douglas, Mary Diana Dods was imprisoned in Paris for debt, where her already ailing physical and mental health rapidly deteriorated. She had probably died by November 1830, when Isabella, as Mrs Douglas, returned to England. In 1839, Isabella Douglas, widow, married the Rev. William Falconer; she died at San Alessi, Italy, in 1869. In 1853, Adeline Douglas married Henry Drummond Wolff as the ‘daughter of Walter Sholto Douglas, an officer in HM’s Service’ (Bennett 1991, p. 231). bb • Dods, M. D., Lyndsay, D. and Douglas, W. S., Works as above, and see Bennett 1991 (Bibl.). Bennett, B.T. (ed.) (1980) The Letters of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, (1991) Mary Diana Dods, a Gentleman and a Scholar (Bibl.); ODNB (2004). DODS, Meg

­(1781–1857)

see JOHNSTONE, Christian Isobel

n. Moir, MBE, born Springburn, Glasgow, 16 August 1887, died Glasgow 16 July 1966. Labour activist and suffragette. Daughter of Annie Wilkinson, and Henry Moir, blacksmith. One of 11 children, Agnes Moir left school aged 11 to work first in a factory and then in a telephone exchange. Her experiences made her a socialist and a feminist; she joined the Socialist Sunday School movement, the WSPU, WLL and ILP, and was an active trade unionist. In 1912 she married Patrick Dollan (1885–1963), an ILP propagandist who would later become leader of the Labour Party on Glasgow Corporation and Lord Provost of the city (1938–41). He was knighted in 1941. They had one son, James, who became a journalist. During the First World War, Agnes Dollan was one of the remarkable group of women who made a distinctive contribution to ‘Red Clydeside’. Working with comrades *Helen Crawfurd and *Mary Barbour, she linked the rent strikes agitation with peace campaigns and other issues. They became well-known figures and took prominent roles within the Labour movement, such as speaking on the platform of the 1917 May Day demonstration at Glasgow Green. Although Harry McShane claimed that Patrick Dollan ‘killed her activity’ (McShane and Smith 1978, p. 34), Agnes

Dollan was particularly active in the immediate post-war years. She was the first woman Labour candidate selected to contest a municipal election in Glasgow, in January 1919. Although unsuccessful, she was elected to the School Board in April and two years later claimed the municipal ward of her home district, Springburn, which she held until illness forced her resignation in 1928. She stood once, unsuccessfully, for Parliament, in 1924, and failed to be re-elected to Glasgow Corporation in the 1930s. She sat on the Labour Party National Executive and campaigned with her husband for the ILP to remain part of the Labour Party. The Second World War saw both Dollans reject their pacifist stance; Agnes’s war efforts were rewarded with an MBE in 1946. Later she joined the Moral Re-armament Movement where her antagonism to the Communist Party found expression. Born into an ‘Orange’ household, she had become a freethinker in early life, but converted to Catholicism in the 1950s. jjs • Glasgow Herald, 18 July 1966 (obit.); McShane, H. and Smith, J. (1978) No Mean Fighter ; ODNB (2004); SLL; Smyth, J. J. (2000) Labour in Glasgow 1896–1936.

DOLLAN, Agnes Johnston, Lady,

DONALDSON, Mary Ethel Muir (M. E. M.), born Norwood, Surrey, 19 May 1876, died Edinburgh 17 Jan. 1958. Author and photographer. Daughter of Mary Isabella Muir, and Alexander Donaldson. Daughter of an emigrant Scot who had moved from Adelaide to England, M. E. M. Donaldson probably derived the means to research and write six substantial books from family connections with the Donaldson Shipping Line. In Scottish Biographies (1938), she described herself as ‘author and lecturer’ and was often in demand for her illustrated topographical and historical talks. M. E. M. Donaldson was a pioneer in the expanding field of photography. With bulky plate camera, heavy tripod and equipment, from about 1905 she explored remoter parts of western Inverness-shire and north Argyll, areas largely ignored by travellers and writers. The territory had been dominated by a cadet branch of Clan Donald, and she rationalised her interest as a return to her ancestral land. She was also attracted by the religious affinities of western Invernessshire, with its strong relict Roman Catholicism and Episcopalianism. She denounced her adopted country’s Presbyterianism in her outspoken critique, Scotland’s Suppressed History (1935). Her remarkable and sensitive photographic studies depicted what she saw as disappearing aspects

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of life and subjects rarely photographed. Her work is remarkable for its aesthetic qualities, its engagement with its topics, and as surviving documentation of west Highland life in the early 20th century. Some books were illustrated by her lifelong friend and travelling companion, Isabel Bonus, but according to Wanderings in the Western Highlands (1921), watercolour became too expensive. However, photography was already integral to her work, since she selected from 900 negatives to illustrate the book, while apologising for some loss of quality in reproduction. In 1925, M. E. M. Donaldson built at Sanna in Ardnamurchan a house constructed of local materials: it demonstrated imaginatively how new buildings could harmonise with a landscape which she saw as becoming disfigured with abominable structures of alien materials. In 1935, she sold up and left Sanna for Somerset and later Edinburgh; some disenchantment is evident in surviving unpublished writings (NMS: MS 1979.23). Over 1,000 glassplate negatives are in Inverness Museum and Art Gallery. Another 123 went to the NMS after being used in the affectionate tribute, ‘Herself ’ (1979). hc • NMS: MS 1979.23, Typescript, unpublished ‘The building of our home in the Highlands – And much else besides’. Donaldson, M. E. M., Works as above, and (1919) Tonal Mactonal, (1926) Further Wanderings – mainly in Argyll, (1949) ‘Till Scotland Melts in Flame’. Dunbar, J. T. (1979) ‘Herself ’: the life and photographs of M. E. M. Donaldson; SB.

born Eskdale c. 1480, died probably Blackadder, Berwickshire, c. 1530. Landowner. Daughter of Elizabeth Drummond, and George Douglas, Master of Angus. Wife of Robert Blackadder of that Ilk, Alison Douglas was widowed after Flodden Field (1513) and then married David Hume, 4th baron of Wedderburn. Her two daughters, co-heiresses of the Blackadder estate, married her new husband’s younger brothers, John and Robert, in 1518. It is likely that the Humes forced their marriages by browbeating Alison. These women typify the landed widows and semi-orphaned daughters exploited in the aftermath of Flodden, despite royal proclamations intended to protect them and their lands. Alison Douglas’s woes persisted because of her kindred with the Douglas earls of Angus. Her husband was forfeited in 1517 for his associations with Alexander, Lord Home, though his lands were later restored. However, Alison Douglas was fondly DOUGLAS, Alison,

remembered by later Hume generations. David Hume of Godscroft called her ‘a woman of extraordinary beauty and adorned with piety, goodness and every virtue which procured her honour and esteem from all’ (Hume 1839, p. 20). mmm • Hume of Godscroft, D. (1839) De Familia Humia Wedderburnensi Liber ; SP, i, pp. 186–9, iii, p. 281.

born Glasgow 28 Feb. 1772, died Lanarkshire 25 July 1862. Absentee West India planter, slave-owner, art-collector, benefactress. Daughter of Cecilia Buchanan, and John Douglas, West India merchant. In 1794, Cecilia Douglas married Gilbert Douglas (1749–1807), a rich West India planter in Glasgow. After his death, she inherited half shares in his plantations and enslaved people in St Vincent and Demerara. She took an active interest in the affairs of the estates, including reducing debts, and on the emancipation of slavery in the British West Indies in 1834, she collected over £3,000 from the British Government for her enslaved property in St Vincent. Her late husband also bequeathed her the use of estates in Lanarkshire in Scotland, Douglas Park and Boggs, where she lived for the rest of her life. In the 1820s, Cecilia Douglas undertook a grand tour of Europe, acquiring luxurious objects and paintings. She also made profitable investments in British industry and commerce. Before her death, aiming to preserve her own and her family’s legacy, she commissioned a stained-glass window in Glasgow Cathedral (although since removed). She died in Douglas Park House on 25 July 1862. A very wealthy woman (worth c. £40,000), she bequeathed her entire art collection – probably acquired in Italy – to Glasgow Corporation. Some of the paintings are today on display in the Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum, Glasgow. Cecilia Douglas – who possessed a fortune derived from Caribbean slavery – was therefore an important philanthropist in the history of Glasgow’s cultural estate. SM

DOUGLAS, Cecilia

• eODNB (Bibl); Legacies of British Slave Ownership database, www.ucl.ac.uk/lbs DOUGLAS, Charlotte Ann, OBE, born Auchterarder 29 Dec. 1894, died Perth 27 August 1979. MO, major contributor to Cathcart Report. Daughter of Georgina Cruickshank, and Joseph Douglas, bank manager. Charlotte Douglas graduated MBChB from the University of Glasgow in 1919. Having obtained a Diploma in Public Health from

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Cambridge, enabling her to work as a local authority Medical Officer, she completed her MD in Glasgow in 1925. After posts at the City of Bradford ante-natal clinic, as house physician at the Glasgow Royal Maternity and Women’s Hospital, and house surgeon at Glasgow Royal Infirmary, she became in 1931 MO for Maternity and Child Welfare of the Department of Health for Scotland, a post she held for 30 years. In the 1930s and 1940s, she travelled Scotland, monitoring maternity and child welfare services, and her series of reports to the Chief MO for Scotland helped lay the foundations for increased Scottish government maternity provision. With colleague Peter L. McKinlay, Charlotte Douglas conducted the systematic investigation published as the DHS Report on Maternal Mortality and Morbidity in Scotland (1935). Its recommendations were endorsed in the DHS Scottish Health Services Committee Report (Cathcart Report, 1936) based on Douglas and McKinlay’s statistics. The maternal ill-health and mortality caused by inadequate or intrusive medical care and the lack of medical support revealed in these reports led to the 1937 Maternity Services (Scotland) Act. Wrangles over medical fees meant that some local authorities were slow to implement it, but this comprehensive service for Scotland, with co-ordinated medical attendance by midwife, doctor and consultant, free of charge for those unable to pay fees, was far in advance of that elsewhere in Britain. With medical progress and improved nutrition during wartime, this reform led to a drop in maternal mortality rates from 4.8 per 1,000 births in 1937 to 3.0 per 1,000 in 1944. Charlotte Douglas was made an OBE and retired in 1962. jlmj • Douglas, C. A. (1926) ‘Ante-natal clinics and their uses’, Jour. Roy. Sanitary Institute, (1935) DHS Report on Maternal Mortality and Morbidity in Scotland (jointly with McKinlay, P. L.), (1959) ‘Maternal and infant mortality in Scotland’ DHS Bulletin. BMJ 280.6218: 948, 29 March 1980 (obit.); Jenkinson, J. (2002) Scotland’s Health 1919–1948; Maclachlan, G. (ed.) (1987) Improving the Common Weal; Medical Directory (1935); Medical Register (1935) DOUGLAS, Lady Elizabeth, Countess of Erroll,

fl 1587–1615. Poet. Daughter of Lady Agnes Leslie, daughter of the Earl of Rothes, and Sir William Douglas, Earl of Morton. Elizabeth Douglas is probably the ‘E. D.’ who composed two sonnets to the Scottish Renaissance poet, William Fowler (1560–1612).

Although another Elizabeth Douglas, wife of Samuel Cockburne of Temple-Hall and daughter of William Douglas of Whittingehame, has also been proposed as ‘E. D.’, the case for the Earl of Morton’s daughter is strengthened by the sonnet which Fowler dedicated to the ‘Co[u]ntess of Erroll’ since, in 1590, she married Francis Hay, 9th Earl of Erroll (c. 1564–1631), brother of *Helen Hay Countess of Linlithgow. These sonnets appear to be her only extant work, composed in December 1587 according to the date of the manuscript in which they are found (‘The Triumphs of the Most Famous Poet M. Frances Petrarke Translated out of italian into inglish by Mr. Wm. Fouler P. of Hauicke’). Elizabeth Douglas’s marriage may have caused controversy since her husband was a convert to Roman Catholicism; it is not known whether she also converted. As his third wife, she gave birth to five sons and eight daughters. She may have entered royal circles through the political connections of her father during the 1580s and 90s, the culminating period of the Jacobean, or ‘Castilian’, literary Renaissance of which she seems to have been part, unusually, since most of James VI’s court poets were male. The sonnets appear in the manuscript’s opening section, immediately after the King’s own dedicatory poem. Devised in the distinctive rhyme scheme of Scottish sonneteers, they are entitled ‘E. D. in praise of Mr. Wm. Foular her friend’ and ‘E. D. in commendatioun of the authour and of his choise’. Fowler’s ‘choise’ related to two women, and one of E. D.’s sonnets transforms Petrarch’s flawless Laura into the even more peerless Lady Jean Fleming, dedicatee of Fowler’s translation: ‘No Laura heir, bot Ladye Ieane it is./O Ladye liwe! Thy foular the extolls/Whose golden pen thy name in fame Inrolls’ (ll. 12–14). The poems show Elizabeth Douglas’s familiarity with the literary ideals of Scottish Renaissance art; she herself seems the epitome of the learned female courtier. sd • Edinburgh Univ. Library: MS De.1.10; NLS: MS 2065. HSWW; Meikle, H. W. (ed.) (1914–40) The Works of William Fowler ; ODNB (2004) (Fowler, William; Hay, Francis); Travitsky, B. (ed.) (1981) The Paradise of Women: writings by Englishwomen of the Renaissance. DOUGLAS, Lady Frances, n. Scott, born 26 July 1750, died Bothwell Castle May 1817. Correspondent. Daughter of Lady Caroline Campbell, Baroness Greenwich, and Francis Scott, Earl of Dalkeith. Born after her father’s death, Lady Frances Scott acquired a stepfather in 1755, when her

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mother married Charles Townsend, the great Whig politician. She grew up in one of the most glamorous political and social circles of the age. She joined the household of her brother, Henry, 3rd Duke of Buccleuch, in 1767, travelling to Scotland for the first time to reside at Dalkeith Palace. Subsequent trips to Ireland, Wales and the Lake District resulted in lively letters and verse journals which were widely circulated among friends and family. At her brother’s home she met Archibald, Lord Douglas (1748–1827), son of *Lady Jane Douglas, the figure at the centre of the infamous ‘Douglas Cause’, an inheritance dispute between the Douglases and the Duke of Hamilton which was eventually settled in the allegedly illegitimate Archibald’s favour. Lady Frances became Lord Douglas’s second wife on 13 May 1783. Her companion on the wedding trip through Scotland was her cousin, *Lady Louisa Stuart, who became a frequent visitor to Bothwell Castle, the Douglas family seat. She later annotated Lady Frances’s Journal. Lady Frances raised 12 children, including four step-children. Following her death, Lady Louisa Stuart wrote a ‘Memoir’ of her for Lady Frances’s daughter, the novelist Caroline Scott (1784–1857). Intended for private circulation but later published, it paints a vivid picture of her world, and the political and social intrigues characterising such aristocratic families. But the memoir was mainly intended as a record of a kind, clever woman, a good mother and wife, whose main virtues, despite her brilliant connections, were domestic and familial. Her daughter Caroline, who married Captain George Scott (1770–1841) in 1810, began to write in her 40s. Several educational works appeared under her own name, but her three novels were all published anonymously. sn

Two years later in France, she allegedly gave birth to twin sons, heirs to their childless uncle. She was aged 50 and the news of her fecundity was received with scepticism, not least by the next heirs, the Dukes of Hamilton. It was rumoured that she had adopted the children of French beggars, claiming them as her own. In 1761, after her death, her surviving son Archibald (later husband of Lady Frances Scott, see *Frances Douglas) became part of a decade-long inheritance dispute with the Hamiltons and dowager duchess, *Elizabeth Gunning. ‘The Douglas Cause’ was subject to intense press scrutiny and Jane Douglas was at its heart. Everyone agreed she was a kind and tender mother, but was this evidence of true maternity or just a humane education? Her mothering featured in significant public debates between lawyers and judges and in pamphlets and news articles about whether people could love children not biologically related to them. KB • (1767) Letters of the Right Honourable Lady Jane Douglas with Other Important Pieces of Private Correspondence; (1767) A Summary of the Speeches, Arguments . . . The Lords of Council and Session in Scotland, upon that Important Cause, wherein His Grace the Duke of Hamilton and Others were Plaintiffs and Archibald Douglas of Douglas . . .; (1767) [James Boswell?], Consideration on the Douglas Cause in a Letter from a Gentleman in Scotland to his Friend in London; ODNB (2004).

• Stuart, Lady L. [n. d.] (1985) Gleanings from an Old Portfolio, Memoire of Frances, Lady Douglas, J. Rubenstein, ed. ODNB (2004) (Douglas, Frances; Scott, Caroline). DOUGLAS, Lady Jane, born 17 March 1698, died Edinburgh 21 Nov. 1753. Noblewomen. Daughter of Lady Mary Kerr, and James Douglas, second Marquess of Douglas. Lady Jane Douglas was given a polite education by tutors and considered throughout her life to be intelligent, humane and attractive. As the only sibling of Archibald, Duke of Douglas, she was courted by several top aristocrats, and eventually secretly married the penniless Colonel John Steuart of Grandtully in 1746.

DOUGLAS, Janet, Lady Glamis, born c. 1504, died Edinburgh 17 July 1537. Convicted of treason. Daughter of Elizabeth Drummond, and George Douglas, Master of Angus. Janet Douglas married John Lyon, 6th Lord Glamis, and had four children, but quarrelled with him in 1526 over his failure to support her brother, Archibald, 6th Earl of Angus, in plotting against James V. In 1528, the year her husband died, she was summonsed for helping Angus to organise a rising against the King, and her goods were seized. She was charged in 1532 with poisoning Glamis, but the trial collapsed. She then married Archibald Campbell of Skipnish. Accused of plotting to poison the king, she was burned at the stake on Castle Hill on 17 July 1537 before a large and sympathetic crowd. She seems to have been no mere passive victim of royal hostility but a formidable and energetic protagonist on behalf of the Douglases. rkm

• Cameron, J. (1998) James V; Crim. Trials; Fraser, W. (1895) The Douglas Book; ODNB (2004); SP; Tytler, P. F. (1841–3) History of Scotland 1249–1603.

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DOUGLAS DOUGLAS, Katherine (Catherine) [Kate Barlass] fl. 1437. Quasi-historical heroine. When in 1437 a plot was hatched against the life of James I, who was staying in Perth, the conspirators had removed the bolts from the doors of the royal apartments. James and his wife, *Joan Beaufort, were taken by surprise, but one of Joan’s ladies, Katherine Douglas, is said to have thrust her arm into the iron loops where the wooden bolt would have been, to impede the attackers’ progress. When they burst in, they broke her arm. She had provided enough time for the King to hide, but he was later found and killed. His protector went down in history as ‘Kate Barlass’, and her story is often told in books for children, though there are no records of its accuracy. The story was first recounted much later by a mid-sixteenth century historian, who may have elaborated on a more prosaic report from the time that a court lady, Elizabeth (not Katherine) Douglas, accidentally fell into the King’s hiding place. sr

• Balfour-Melville, E. M. (1936) James I King of Scots; Brown, M. (2000) James I, pp. 192–3; Marshall, H. E. (1964 edn.) Scotland’s Story, pp. 122–3; Mee, A. (n.d.) The Children’s Encyclopedia. DOUGLAS, Margaret, born c. 1426, died before April 1475. Heiress. Daughter of Euphemia Graham, and Archibald, 5th Earl of Douglas. Margaret Douglas’s brothers, William, 6th Earl of Douglas, and David, were executed in February 1440. Engineered by their great-uncle, James the Gross, their deaths delivered the entailed Douglas estates to him. Margaret Douglas, however, would succeed to the unentailed lands, mainly in Galloway, on the death of her grandmother, Margaret, daughter of Robert III. For the rest of her life, control of those lands was determined by arranged marriages. James was determined to re-unite the Douglas heritage and strove to secure a marriage between his son William (1424/5–52) and Margaret. Papal dispensation came in July 1444, by which time William had become the 8th Earl. After William’s murder by James II in February 1452, the childless widow regained her inheritance. The new Earl, William’s brother James (c. 1425–91), secured papal dispensation and married her in March 1453. Margaret Douglas probably had little choice in the matter. When the family was forfeited in 1455, she fled to England. In 1459, having obtained an annulment, she returned and sought restoration of her inheritance. Unwilling to lose control of

the Galloway estates, in 1460, James II married Margaret Douglas to his half-brother, John, Earl of Atholl (c. 1440–1512), who held the former Douglas lordship of Balvenie. The marriage produced at least two children. ro • Brown, M. (1998) The Black Douglases; Dunlop, A. (1950) The Life and Times of James Kennedy; Dunlop, A. and MacLauchlan, D. (eds) (1983) Calendar of Scottish Supplications to Rome, iv, 1433–1447; SP.

born Harbottle Castle, Northumberland, 8 Oct. 1515, died Stepney, London, 9 March 1578. Daughter of *Margaret Tudor, Queen of Scotland, and Archibald, 6th Earl of Angus. Margaret Douglas was born as her mother was fleeing to London during the Scottish power struggles following the death of her first husband, James IV. She had quarrelled with her second husband, the Earl of Angus who, after she returned to Scotland in 1517, snatched Margaret from her arms, keeping her in his custody until his exile in 1528. Margaret’s uncle, Henry VIII, arranged for her to live in the household of his elder daughter, Mary. Margaret Douglas had several romantic attachments before marrying, in 1544, Matthew Stewart, 4th Earl of Lennox (1516–71), a descendant of James I. He, too, had been exiled to England. They lived at her residence of Stepney Palace, but shortly before Henry VIII’s death in 1547, Margaret quarrelled bitterly with him over her devotion to the Roman Catholic Church. During the reign of Protestant Edward VI she lived mostly at Temple Newsam, her husband’s Yorkshire home. Their household became the centre for Roman Catholics in England, and, under Mary, Margaret Douglas was at the centre of affairs again. Mary gave her expensive presents and for a time treated her as her heir. However, under the Protestant Elizabeth I, she withdrew to Temple Newsam in 1558. Her hopes now centred on her elder son, Henry, Lord Darnley, and she worked to promote his marriage to her niece, *Mary, Queen of Scots. When Darnley was murdered at Kirk o’ Field in 1567 she was distraught, blaming Mary for his death, but they were eventually reconciled during Mary’s English captivity. Mary had restored Lennox to his Scottish estates, and in 1570 he became regent of Scotland, ruling for young James VI. The following year, however, Lennox was assassinated, leaving Margaret bereft. The early death in 1576 of Charles, sole survivor of her eight children, sent her into ‘a languishing decay’ (Strickland

DOUGLAS, Lady Margaret, Countess of Lennox,

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DRUMMOND DRINKWATER, Winifred Joyce,‡ m1 Short, m2 Orchard, born Waterfoot, near Eaglesham, 11

1851, 2, p. 448). When she died in 1578 she was buried in Westminster Abbey, after a life at the centre of both political and religious events. rkm • Fraser, W. (1874) The Lennox; Fraser, W. (1885) The Douglas Book; Phillips, J. (1578) A Commemoration of the Right Noble and Vertuous Ladye Margrit Duglasis, Countis of Lennox; *ODNB (2004); Ring, M. (2017) So High a Blood: the life of Margaret, Countess of Lennox; Strickland, A. (1851) Lives of the Queens of Scotland and English Princesses, 2. DOUGLAS, O.

­(1877–1948)

see BUCHAN, Anna Masterton

DOUGLAS, Walter Sholto

(c. 1790–c. 1830)

see DODS, Mary Diana

born Glasgow 28 July 1934 [not 1939 as later claimed], died Dundee 26 July 2002. Painter. Daughter of Winifred McKean, and Thomas Leslie Douthwaite, chemical engineer. Pat Douthwaite was a difficult, precocious child, unsuited to school. Allowed from a young age to attend art and dance classes with *Margaret Morris and her partner, the Scottish Colourist John Duncan Fergusson, she found her salvation in the intellectual and creative freedom represented by Morris’s dance and movement classes and Celtic Ballet, based in Blytheswood Square. Taking Fergusson’s advice to avoid art school, which suited her lifelong, independent, anti-establishment mindset, she set forth to make her way, in London and East Anglia. There, in the irregular company of writers and artists, denizens of Soho escaping to the countryside, she met and married graphic artist Paul Hogarth (1917–2002). They had one son and later divorced. By the 1960s, Pat Douthwaite was working on landscape and the single figure compositions, often of women, which would become her most powerful and familiar subject. The family spent some time in Deya, Majorca, in Robert Graves’s circle, and she also travelled widely abroad. There were solo exhibitions of her work in Cambridge, London and, significantly, the Richard Demarco Gallery in Edinburgh. Pat Douthwaite’s life was always to be peripatetic, unsettled and troubled: recognition was restricted during her lifetime. But work was never abandoned, the fire of creative ambition never dimmed, even when ill health restricted her scope to works on paper. She moved back to Scotland in her final years. GP e

DOUTHWAITE, Patricia Morgan Graham (Pat),

• The Herald, 2 Aug. 2002 (obit.); eODNB; MSW; Peploe, G. (2016) Pat Douthwaite.

April 1913, died Taumarunui, New Zealand, 6 Oct. 1996. Airline pilot and aircraft engineer. Daughter of Emma Banner, and Albert Drinkwater, engineer. Youngest of three children, Winifred Drinkwater joined the SFC on 2 June 1930 and gained her private pilot’s licence shortly after, becoming Scotland’s youngest pilot. Her commercial pilot’s licence and instructor’s certificate followed (1932) and, in 1933, her ground engineer’s licence. Joining Midland & Scottish Air Ferries, she flew her first scheduled flight, from Renfrew to Campbeltown, on 27 April 1933. Her first scheduled flight to London, in an open cockpit Fox Moth, was spread over four days in May 1933, but on 4 July she made the roundtrip flight in a flying time of eight and a half hours. She married Francis Short of Short Brothers, aircraft builders, on 19 July 1934 and they moved to Kent where their two children were born. She still flew occasionally, and in 1942 was co-pilot on test flights of the Short Sunderland flying boat and Short Stirling bomber. The family moved to Padstow, Cornwall, where Francis died in 1954. She later married inshore fisherman William Orchard, who died in 1983. After five years back in Scotland, she went to live with her daughter in New Zealand. Winifred Drinkwater was one of several notable women Pilot Members of the SFC in the 1930s. Janet Hendry (1906–2004) became the first woman member on 12 September 1927, causing the Club to resolve the problem ‘of ladies not being allowed on the aerodrome’ (SFC Minutes). Qualifying for Royal Aero Club Aviator’s Certificate No. 8473 on 3 December 1928, she became Scotland’s first woman pilot. However, flying was regarded as dangerous and, by 1932, prompted by her brother’s death in a car crash, she was on record as lapsed from the SFC. ih • Mitchell Library, Glasgow: Minute Books, SFC. Allan, J. (2002) Wings over Scotland; Clegg, P. V. (1990) Sword in the Sky; ‘Janet Hendry’, Flight, 6 Dec. 1928, 21 March 1929; The Herald, 19 Oct. 1996 (obit. Drinkwater), 21 Feb. 2004 (obit. Hendry). Private information: Anne Brewer (daughter), Peter V. Clegg (historian), Joan Short (daughter-in-law). DRUMMOND, Flora McKinnon, n. Gibson [The General, Bluebell], m1 Drummond, m2 Simpson,

born Manchester 4 August 1878, died Carradale 17 Jan. 1949. Political organiser. Daughter of Sarah Cook, and Francis Gibson, cashier.

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Flora Gibson grew up and was educated at Pirnmill on Arran. She left school at 14 and followed a business training in Glasgow, attending economics lectures at the university there. She qualified as a postmistress but was refused entry as her height was below the regulation 5’ 2”: ‘this rejection always rankled’ (WSM, p. 175). She married Joseph Drummond in 1898 and they moved to Manchester, where she worked for the Oliver typewriter company. Their one child (b. 1908) was named Keir after Keir Hardie. They joined the Fabian Society and the ILP, though she later left the ILP, ‘considering that it only paid lipservice to the women’s cause’ (ibid., p. 175). She joined the WSPU in 1905. Her talent as an organiser emerged when she undertook publicity for the WSPU after Christabel Pankhurst and Annie Kenney were arrested at Manchester Free Trade Hall in 1905. Moving to London in 1906, Flora Drummond became a leading member of the WSPU central committee, spent time in Glasgow as WSPU organiser, then returned to London as national organiser for the local WSPU branches. Perhaps her greatest contribution to the suffrage movement was the organisation and leading of processions and pageants. Known as ‘The General’, she rode astride a huge charger, dressed in quasi-military uniform with a peaked cap of purple, white and green. The London crowds nicknamed her ‘Bluebell’, after the Scottish match, because she was ‘more than a match for cabinet ministers’ (HHGW, p. 100). She was imprisoned nine times, teaching other suffragist inmates Morse code so that they could communicate. During the First World War, she helped the government recruitment drive and the WSPU industrial peace campaign, opposing strikes and lockouts. In 1923, with Elsie Bowerman she founded the Women’s Guild of Empire (WGE), an anti-Communist, anti-fascist organisation. At its peak, the WGE had more than 30 branches. She remained controller until the 1940s. Latterly, she chaired the Six Point Group, was a member of the executive committee of Equal Rights International and in 1947 was a patron of the Suffragette Museum and Record Room. Joseph Drummond left her in 1909 to go to Australia; she married her cousin, engineer Alan Simpson, in 1924. He was killed by a flying bomb at Hammersmith in 1944, after which she moved to Carradale, Argyll. kbb • AGC ; HHGW; Mitchell, D. (1967) The Fighting Pankhursts; ODNB (2004); Pankhurst, S. (1977) The

Suffragette Movement ; Tickner, L. (1987) The Spectacle of Women; WSM. DRUMMOND, Jane (Jean), Countess of Roxburghe,

born in or before 1585, died London June 1643. First Lady of the Bedchamber to *Anna of Denmark. Daughter of Elizabeth Lindsay, and Patrick, 3rd Lord Drummond. Jane Drummond accompanied Anna to London in June 1603 and served as a favoured attendant until she ‘retired’ to Scotland in 1617. Through her close relationship with the Queen, her Catholicism, and her supplying of confidential information to Spain (for which she received a secret pension of approximately £650), she played a significant role at the Jacobean court. As a Catholic she assisted in the Queen’s secret practising of that faith. The Spanish Ambassador reported to Philip III that ‘Mass was being said by a Scottish priest, who was simply called a “servant” of [the Queen’s] lady-in-waiting, Lady Drummond’ (Loomie 1971, p. 308). In serving Spanish interests she embodied pre-1603, proSpanish, Catholic Scottish politics, reflecting W. B. Patterson’s view that post-1603 English foreign and religious politics originated in James VI’s rule in Scotland. One Spanish ambassador described her as ‘a prudent person, ready to give help at any time . . .’ (Loomie 1963, p. 54). In 1609, her kinsman, James Elphinstone, Lord Balmerino, Lord President, whose nephew married her sister in 1607, found her a staunch supporter when he was sentenced to death for treason. He asked for her help, and her influence with the Queen probably saved his life. On 3 February 1614 she married Robert Ker, Lord Roxburghe (1569/70–1650) (created Earl 1616) at Somerset House, the Queen’s palace. She bore at least three children, two of whom survived. In 1617 she lost her position and returned to Scotland because she failed to inform Anna that her husband had secretly sought the Lord Chamberlainship of Prince Charles’s household. She returned to royal service in 1631 when Charles I appointed her governess to Mary, the Princess Royal, and later to his three youngest children. Although she died in London, she was buried in the then ruined chancel of Bowden Parish Church near Kelso on 7 October 1643. hp • NA: PROB 11/197/140. Fraser, Sir W., The Elphinstone Family Book, vol. 2; Loomie, A. J. (1963) ‘Toleration and diplomacy’, Trans. Am. Phil. Soc., New Series 53, 6, (1971) ‘King James I’s Catholic consort’,

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DRUMMOND Huntington Library Quarterly, 34, August; *ODNB (2004) (see Ker, Jane); Patterson, W. B. (1997) King James VI and I and the reunion of Christendom; Payne, H. M. (2001) ‘Aristocratic women and the Jacobean court’, PhD, Univ. of London.

born before 1496, died 1502. Mistress of James IV. Daughter of Elizabeth Lindsay, and John, 1st Lord Drummond, justiciar. One of six children, Margaret Drummond became mistress of James IV, after the end in 1495 of his relationship with Marion Boyd (fl. 1492–1559), with whom he had two children, Alexander and Catherine. Marion, daughter of Christian Mure and Archibald Boyd of Nariston, later married John Mure of Rowallan. Margaret Drummond is first mentioned in royal records in 1496, perhaps having met James on his visit to Drummond Castle in April. During their liaison, she lived briefly at Stirling Castle and at Linlithgow; she was sent back to Drummond Castle early in 1497, perhaps due to her pregnancy, which resulted in the birth of a daughter, Margaret. James’ next liaison was with *Janet Kennedy. Much conjecture surrounds Margaret Drummond’s death. Writing a family history in the late 17th century, William Drummond noted that Margaret was poisoned, along with her sisters, Euphemia and Sybilla, for fear the King would never marry while she lived. Modern historians point out there is no contemporary written evidence to support this premise. Interestingly, however, the negotiations for marriage with *Margaret Tudor were completed in 1502 by the Treaty of Perpetual Peace; Margaret and James married in August 1503. sem DRUMMOND, Margaret,

• Drummond, W. [1681] (1881) The Genealogy of the Most Noble and Ancient House of Drummond; MacDougall, N. (1989) James IV; ODNB (2004); TA, i, pp. 277, 280, 288, 293, 304, 327. DRUMMOND, May (aka Marion

or Mariana), born Edinburgh c. 1710, died Edinburgh 1772. Quaker minister. Daughter of John Drummond, merchant, and his wife. May Drummond became a member of the Society of Friends around 1731, after hearing Thomas Story preach. Her brother, George Drummond, was Provost of Edinburgh and one of the founders of Edinburgh Royal Infirmary. She travelled extensively among English Quakers to raise funds for the hospital. A board in the

entrance to the old hospital records that over £370 was raised in this way, much of it due to her efforts. Although her upper-class family strongly disapproved of her joining the Quakers, she was soon formally recognised as a minister and travelled in the ministry throughout Scotland, England and Ireland, drawing large crowds and holding special meetings for young women. She was granted an audience with Queen Caroline and was ‘the Quakeress’ referred to by Pope in Epilogue to the Satires and by other poets. In 1736, she published a pamphlet, Internal revelation the source of saving knowledge; candidly recommended in several Epistles. By the early 1760s, criticisms of May Drummond’s ministry and her behaviour began to be made by Edinburgh Quakers. A Minute from Edinburgh Monthly Meeting of February 1765 requires her not to speak in Meetings for Worship and suggests that she was stealing food from Friends’ homes, although it is possible that this was malicious gossip. She continued to travel in England, returning to Edinburgh, where she owned property in what was known as ‘May Drummond’s Close’, before her death in 1772. pfb • Drummond, M., Work as above. Miller, W. F. (1907) ‘Episodes in the life of May Drummond’, Journal of the Friends Historical Society 4, 2; ODNB (2004); Skidmore, G. (1998) Dear Friends and Sisters: 25 short biographies of Quaker women; Reilly, M. (2015–16) ‘The life and literary fictions of May Drummond, Quaker female preacher’, Eighteenth-Century Fiction 28, 2, pp. 287–312; Turner, A. L. (1937) Story of a Great Hospital: the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, 1729–1929.

MBE, born Errol, Perthshire, 14 Oct. 1894, died Kent 25 Dec. 1978. Marine engineer. Daughter of Geraldine Thyssen-Amherst, and Captain Malcolm Drummond. Victoria Drummond, a goddaughter of *Queen Victoria, grew up at Megginch Castle in Perthshire. After war service (1914–18) in a Perth garage, she worked in a Dundee shipyard, while attending Technical College evening classes. She began her career as an engineer with the Blue Funnel Line in Liverpool and overcame prejudice to become the first British woman to serve as Chief Engineer in the Merchant Navy, and the first to hold a Board of Trade Certificate as a ship’s engineer. During the Second World War, she sailed through mines into the Mediterranean to the rescue of part of the British Expeditionary Force. During one voyage

DRUMMOND, Victoria Alexandrina,

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her ship, the Bonita, was bombed in the Atlantic: after running the engines single-handed during the attack, she arrived back to find herself a heroine. She was awarded the MBE in 1941 and Lloyd’s War Medal for gallantry at sea, the first woman to earn it. A canteen, serving food to blitz victims in Lambeth North, was named in her honour. Later she sailed in Atlantic convoys to Murmansk and was involved in the Normandy D-Day landings. It was only in 1962 that she retired from her last ship and wrote the logbook of her life, with details of all her sailings, published in 1994 by her niece, Cherry Drummond, Lady Strange (1928–2005), the colourful peer, romantic novelist and campaigner for war widows. ls • Drummond, C. (ed.) (1994) The Remarkable Life of Victoria Drummond – Marine Engineer; DWT; ODNB (2004); The Times, 25 March 2005 (obit. Lady Strange).

born Kirkcaldy, 26 August 1792, died Geelong, Victoria, Australia, May 1853. Pioneer squatter. Daughter of Anne Cunnison, and William Drysdale, town clerk of Kirkcaldy. Anne Drysdale emigrated to Melbourne in 1840 with capital of £3,000, apparently already experienced in farming. Dr Alexander Thomson of Geelong, son of an Aberdeen shipowner, helped her to secure a licence on a 10,000-acre run at Boronggoop. In 1841, she moved there with another of Thomson’s guests, Londoner Caroline Newcomb (1812–74), who had emigrated to Van Diemen’s Land in 1833. In 1843 the partners, both Methodists, purchased the freehold property of Coryule, on which by 1844 they were running 6,000 sheep, as well as a few horses and cows. In 1849, they replaced their primitive cottage with a substantial stone house. Despite problems, including defection of labour to the gold fields, the unusual partnership continued until 1852, when Anne Drysdale suffered a stroke, from the effects of which she died 11 months later. Thereafter the enterprise was run single-handedly by Caroline Newcomb. mdh

DRYSDALE, Anne,

• State Library of Victoria: MS 9249, diary of Anne Drysdale. ADB; Brown, P. L. (ed.) (1941–56) The Clyde Company Papers, vols II, pp. 241, 270–1; III, p. 77; V, p. 291, pp. 617–18. Richardson, J. (1986) The Lady Squatters. www.zades.com.au/geelong/gdppl003.htm DUNBAR, Agnes, Countess of see RANDOLPH, Agnes (Black Agnes of Dunbar) (born before 1324,

d. c. 1369)

DUNBAR, Elizabeth, fl. 1395–1438. Prioress of St Leonard’s, Perth. Daughter of Christian (possibly Seton), and George Dunbar, Earl of March. Elizabeth Dunbar was betrothed to David, Earl of Carrick (later Duke of Rothesay), son of *Annabella Drummond and Robert III. Her father paid a large sum to Robert III for this match but in c. 1400 Rothesay broke the agreement and married Mary, daughter of Archibald, Earl of Douglas, who offered a much larger sum. Rothesay and Elizabeth may have already been married – two papal dispensations of 1395 and 1397 stated that they had contracted and consummated their marriage. Robert, Duke of Albany, Governor of Scotland from 1406, was patron of St Leonard’s, Perth, and favoured the Earls of March. He may have placed Elizabeth Dunbar at the Augustinian convent as a result of her humiliation by Rothesay. On 23 November 1411, the master of the associated hospital resigned his rights to the ‘honorable Lady Elizabeth Dunbar’ so that it might be governed by devout women ‘religiously associating with chaste bodies’ (Perth Museum, MS 65, p. 3). Elizabeth Dunbar was Prioress until 24 April 1438, when she resigned her position. The hospital and convent were granted to the Perth Charterhouse, founded by James I. Nothing further is known about her. kp

• NRS: GD79, King James VI Hospital Perth; Perth Museum & Art Gallery, MS 65, Regarding the Hospitals of Perth. Boardman, S. (1996) The Early Stewart Kings; Macdonald, A. J. (2000) Border Bloodshed: Scotland, England and France at War, 1369–1403. DUNBAR, Elizabeth, Countess of Moray, c. 1425–c. 1494. Daughter of Margaret Seton, and James Dunbar, 4th Earl of Moray. Celebrated as the ‘dow [dove] of Dunbar’ by poet Richard Holland in ‘The Buke of the Howlat’ (c. 1450), Elizabeth Dunbar brought the Moray title to her marriage to Archibald Douglas (c. 1442), despite being the younger co-heir. He was killed at Arkinholm on 1 May 1455; on 20 May she contracted to marry her cousin Lord George Gordon (1440/1–1501), later 2nd Earl of Huntly. George Gordon undertook not to force her into ‘carnal copulation but of her free will’ before the marriage. He also allowed her young son, James, to remain in her care ‘withouten bodily harm till his lif ’, and undertook to ensure that she was ‘undistroblit in the posyession of hir erledom of Murra’ (Misc. Spalding 1849, pp. 128–9). Her daughter Janet is

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also mentioned in the contract. The notarial copy states that she signed the agreement with her own hand. (The earliest recorded Scottish woman’s signature is her sister Janet Dunbar’s in 1454.) Elizabeth Dunbar was divorced by 1459, possibly because the earldom of Moray was not re-granted to George Gordon. He then married Annabella, daughter of James I (see Stewart, Margaret). Elizabeth Dunbar moved west following her third marriage to Sir John Colquhoun of Luss, c. 1463. They had a son, John. After her husband’s death in 1478, she sued her stepson Humphrey for withholding her rightful inheritance. The Book of Hours which she probably used in the Rossdhu family chapel, dedicated on 6 April 1469, lists anniversaries of her favourite saints, her father, and other relatives. The book was given to Auckland City Library in New Zealand in 1882. am c k • Auckland City Libraries, NZ: Med. Ms G146, Rossdhu Book of Hours: www.aucklandcity.gov.nz/dbtw-wpd/exac/ dbtwpub.dll. Holland, R. (2014) The Buke of the Howlat, R. Hanna (ed.); McKim, A. (2006) ‘The Rossdhu Book of Hours . . .’, in A. Barratt and S. Hollis (eds) Disiecta Membra (Bibl.); Misc. of the Spalding Club, iv, 1849; ODNB (2004) (Dunbar family); WoM.

MBE, m. Nisbet, born Alexandria, near Glasgow, 22 June 1900, died Glasgow 10 Nov. 1997. Singer, choir mistress. Daughter of Jeannie Jamieson, and William Duncan, engineer. Agnes Duncan, who left school at 15 to work as a clerk, married in 1932 Matthew Morrison Nisbet, a clerk in Glasgow City Offices. She devoted her life to the West of Scotland choral scene. A member of the Co-operative Choir, she joined the Glasgow Orpheus Choir under the baton of Sir Hugh Roberton, becoming principal solo contralto. The choir gave its last concert in the St Andrews Halls on 11 April 1951. Agnes Duncan then set up the Scottish Junior Singers. Aided by family members, she ran a mixed choir for 7- to ­12-year-olds and a choir for girls aged 12 to 21, rehearsing on Saturdays in the old Girls’ High School, Garnethill. Their concerts sold out in the St Andrews Halls (later in Woodside Halls and Odeon Cinema). Awarded the MBE in 1967, she was an adjudicator for the Gaelic Mod and other music festivals. An Agnes Duncan trophy is awarded in the Glasgow Music Festivals, as is a Kate Carson prize honouring her daughter Catherine, a speech therapist who carried on her mother’s work. Choirs were popular in the Glasgow area, as part of

DUNCAN, Agnes McMillan,

the ethos of self-improvement and civic awareness underpinning left-wing politics of the time. For women, it was also a respectable way of having a night off from domesticity, while the Scottish Junior Singers gave girls from all over Glasgow a chance to travel, singing at concerts throughout the UK. In 1961, they won the BBC Let the People Sing competition, and sang regularly on radio and television from the mid-1950s until 1966. lh • The Herald, 26 March 1997 (obit.). Private information: J. Grant Carson. Personal knowledge.

n. Clark, born Dumfries 2 July 1812, died London 26 Dec. 1878. Author. Daughter of Elizabeth Nicolson, and Samuel Clark, lawyer. Isabelle Clark complained of a lack of rigour in her education, but developed a taste for literature by her early twenties. She married George Duncan (1806–68), minister at Kirkpatrick Durham, in 1833, and had nine children, five of whom survived to adulthood. The family affiliated with the Free Church in the 1843 Disruption and were afterwards associated with English Presbyterian churches, settling in London in 1851. In 1860 Isabelle Duncan published Pre-Adamite man: or, the story of our old planet and its inhabitants told by Scripture and science, a concordist work that attempted to find harmony between scripture and recent developments in the science of geology. Popular in tone, illustrated and written in a gripping literary prose, it is full of facts from recent science. She used pre-Adamism (the theory that God had created a human race before Adam) to help reconcile the biblical creation account with the expanding timescale of geology, proposing that Genesis 1 describes the creation of the pre-Adamites and Genesis 2 the creation of the race of Adam. She sacralised the Ice Age as a pre-Noachic catastrophe that brought the pre-Adamite epoch to an end, contending that the righteous pre-Adamites became the angels and the wicked became demons. Lack of genealogical continuity between preAdamites and Adamites helped her maintain her Calvinist orthodoxy. The work generated interest among Scottish and English evangelicals and went through five editions, but was controversial; it appeared anonymously until the final edition in 1866, partly due to her husband’s prominent position in the English Presbyterian church. Isabelle Duncan revealed her name then, partly from irritation that most

DUNCAN, Isabelle (Wight),

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r­ eviewers assumed she was male. However, the work gave some evangelicals an alternative to Darwin’s Origin of Species (1859), coincidentally released only weeks previously. Pre-Adamite man, the first full-length work on pre-Adamism by an evangelical, played an important role in introducing pre-Adamite anthropology and angelology to the English-speaking evangelical world. ss • Duncan, I., Work as above. Gould, S. J. (2002) ‘The pre-Adamite in a nutshell’, in S. J. Gould, I Have Landed: the end of a beginning in natural history, pp. 130–46; *ODNB (2004); Livingstone, D. N. (2008) Adam’s Ancestors: race, religion, and the politics of human origins; Snobelen, S. D. (2001) ‘Of stones, men and angels: the competing myth of Isabelle Duncan’s Pre-Adamite man (1860)’, Studies in the History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 32, pp. 59–104. DUNCAN, Jane

(1910–76)

see CAMERON, Elizabeth Jane

n. Lundie, born Kelso 26 April 1814, died Cleish, Kinross-shire 5 Jan. 1840. Hymn writer. Daughter of Mary Grey, and Rev. Robert Lundie, minister of Kelso. Mary Lundie married William Wallace Duncan, minister of Cleish, in 1836, while her younger sister Jane married hymn writer Horatius Bonar, minister in Kelso. Mary Duncan’s hymns were written for her children in the last year of her short life and included in a memoir by her mother (Lundie 1841). The hymns were published ­separately as Rhymes for my Children (1842). One entitled ‘An evening prayer’ and beginning ‘Jesus, tender shepherd, hear me’, became well known, and was found in many hymn books. jrw

DUNCAN, Mary,

• Barkley, J. M. Handbook to the Church Hymnary, 3rd edn.; CDH; Julian, J. (1892, 1907) A Dictionary of Hymnology; Lundie, M. (1841, 8th edn. 1868) Memoir of Mrs W. W. Duncan; Scott, H. (1917) Fasti Ecclesiae Scoticanae, vol. 2, pp. 72–73; Additional information: Alison Robertson. DUNCAN, Ursula Katherine, born Kensington 17 Sept. 1910, died Dundee 27 Jan. 1985. Botanist and landowner. Daughter of Dorothy Weston, and Commander J. A. Duncan. During Ursula Duncan’s infancy, her family returned to Parkhill, Arbroath, the ancestral home. She was educated by a governess, and her academic achievements (BA, MA Classics, external, University of London) were the result almost

entirely of self-teaching, intellect and persistence. She was also a pianist of some distinction. She began her botanical studies aged 10, encouraged by her father: they visited remote places, often by bicycle, to study flowers. Already a member of the Wild Flower Society, she made early contacts with eminent botanists by correspondence; their encouragement led to her important work in the fields of bryophytes, lichens and flowering plants. The most distinguished amateur botanist of her day, Ursula Duncan published in leading specialist journals. Significant publications include her Bryophyte Flora of Angus (1966) and Flora of Easter Ross (1980), the culmination of years of singlehanded work. She also contributed to the production of the Floras of Angus and Mull. Generous with help to others, she gave courses at Kindrogan Field Centre. Alongside botanical work, she ran the family estate, including 600 acres of farmland, which she inherited in 1943: the income enabled her to pursue her studies. She received the Bloomer Medal of the Linnean Society and an honorary doctorate from the University of Dundee, a title which she modestly refrained from using. aw • Obits: (1985) Jour. of Bryology, 13; (1986) Lichenologist, 18, 4; (1985) Scottish Newsletter, Botanical Society of the British Isles, 7; (1986) Watsonia 16, 2. DUNCAN, [Victoria] Helen Macrae, n. MacFarlane, born Callander 25 Nov. 1897, died Edinburgh 6 Dec. 1956. Materialising medium. Daughter of Isabella Rattray, and Archibald MacFarlane, slater and builder. Helen MacFarlane’s tomboyish nature earned her the nickname ‘hellish Nell’. Even as a child she claimed clairvoyant and spirit-seeing abilities. In 1914, she became pregnant and went to a women’s hostel in Dundee, where, after the birth of her daughter Isabella in 1915, she worked in the jute mills. In 1916 she married Henry Duncan (1897–1967), who became a cabinet maker. Helen Duncan worked in the bleach fields and with the birth of seven more children (six survived childhood), the family lived in poverty. Henry read about mediumship and encouraged his wife to hold sittings with friends. Guests were invited; gradually a small charge was made, then substantial sums. Helen Duncan became famous for her materialisation skills – the ability to produce ectoplasm, a white, allegedly spiritual, substance. Her spirit guides, relaying messages from the dead, were ‘Albert’ and ‘Peggy’. In 1933, a séance was raided and she was fined £10 for fraud, ‘Peggy’ apparently having been

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materialised from Helen Duncan’s stockinette vest. Despite controversy, her services thrived; famously, in 1941 she apparently materialised a deceased sailor from the ship Barham when its sinking was still an official secret. It has been suggested that, consequently, British intelligence services watched and targeted her. In 1944, after another raid, she was tried at the Old Bailey and sentenced to nine months’ imprisonment under the Witchcraft Act 1735. Afterwards, she held sittings again. In October 1956 the police raided a séance in Nottingham but found no clear evidence of fraud. There is a continuing campaign to clear her name of the 1944 conviction. A bronze bust of Helen Duncan is in the Smith Art Gallery and Museum, Stirling. fs • Brealey, G. and Hunter, K. (1985) The Two Worlds of Helen Duncan; Cassirer, M. (1996) Medium on Trial; Gaskill, M. (2002) Hellish Nell, Last of Britain’s Witches; ODNB (2004); West, J. D. (1946) ‘The trial of Mrs Helen Duncan’, Proc. Soc. Psychical Research XLVIII, 172: http://www.historic-uk. com/HistoryUK/Scotland-History/Helen Duncan.htm DUNLOP, Annie Isabella, n. Cameron, OBE, born Glasgow 10 May 1897, died Kilmarnock 23 March 1973. Historian. Daughter of Mary Sinclair, and James Cameron, engineer. Educated in Glasgow, Annie Cameron graduated from the University of Glasgow (MA History, 1919). She became a leading record scholar. Her doctoral thesis (Edinburgh, 1924) later appeared as The Life and Times of James Kennedy, Bishop of St Andrews (1950). In 1927 she published The Scottish Correspondence of Mary of Lorraine (*Mary of Guise). In 1928, as Carnegie Research Fellow, she attended the Vatican School of Palaeography in Rome. Although initially finding life difficult in the male environment, she formed a lifelong association with the Vatican Archives, publicising its rich resources in Scottish Supplications to Rome (1934–70) and notes from over 700 volumes. Her frequent visits resulted in her affectionate nickname, Nonna (grandmother) of the Archivo Vaticano. After obtaining a DLitt (St Andrews, 1934), she worked in the Scottish Record Office (now NRS) until 1938 when she married George Dunlop, proprietor of the Kilmarnock Standard, and moved to Dunselma, Fenwick, Ayrshire. She taught part-time at the University of Edinburgh in 1942 and contributed regularly to the Standard. An OBE (1942) and an honorary LLD from St Andrews (1950) followed. Widowed in 1950, she travelled internationally, researching, lecturing and writing, promoting Scottish history. In 1972, Pope Paul VI personally

awarded her the Benemerenti medal for services to scholarship. ee • NRS: Acc. 6528, Papers of Dr Annie J. Dunlop. Dunlop, A., Works as above, and see Bibl. below. Cowan, I. B. (1976) ‘Annie I. Dunlop 1897–1973’, in C. Burns (ed.) Calendar of Papal Letters to Scotland of Clement VII of Avignon (Bibl.); Roy, K. (ed.) (1999) Dictionary of Scottish Biography I, 1971–5.

n. Wallace, born Craigie House, Wallacetown, near Ayr, 16 April 1730, died Dunlop House, Dunlop, Ayrshire, 24 May 1815. Landowner and correspondent of Robert Burns, poet. Daughter of Lady Eleanor Agnew, heiress to the Lochryan Estate, and Sir Thomas Wallace, advocate. In 1748, Frances Wallace eloped from Dunskey House in Wigtownshire with John Dunlop of Dunlop (1707–85). The marriage was happy and they had seven sons and six daughters. She inherited the Lochryan Estate on her mother’s death in 1761. When her husband died on 5 June 1785 she suffered a breakdown lasting more than a year. She was given a copy of Robert Burns’s poem ‘The Cotter’s Saturday Night’, and its sentiments touched her heart. In November 1786, she ordered from Burns six copies of Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect. This began a correspondence, and they met at least five times. Although Burns valued her opinion and shared his thoughts with her, Frances Dunlop and he were political opposites and this emerged in a letter dated 12 January 1795 in which Burns referred to the executed French monarchs as ‘a perjured Blockhead & an unprincipled Prostitute’. As two of her daughters were married to French royalist émigrés, she found this unacceptable language. After Burns’s death Frances Dunlop and her daughter Eleanor Perochon showed great kindness to his widow *Jean Armour and her family. When Burns’s remains were moved from his tomb to the Burns Mausoleum on 19 September 1817, Jean Armour agreed that when Eleanor Perochon died, she could be laid to rest in the vacated tomb of the poet. She died on 10 October 1825 and lies where Burns once lay. mb

DUNLOP, Frances Anna,

• Burns, G. Narrative Letter to Mrs. Dunlop, 1797; ECSWW; ODNB (2004); Wallace, W. (1898) Robert Burns and Mrs. Dunlop. DUNLOP, Isobel Violet Skelton, born Edinburgh 4 March 1901, died Haddington 12 May 1975. Composer, music teacher, concert organiser.

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Daughter of Ellen Thompson, and William Dunlop, company secretary. Isobel Dunlop’s name honours her descent from the poet John Skelton. Educated at Rothesay House, Edinburgh, she studied violin with Camillo Ritter, singing with Michael Poutiatine, and composition at the University of Edinburgh under Sir Donald Tovey and Dr Hans Gál. In the 1930s, she taught at Westonbirt and Downham schools and between 1943 and 1948 was Assistant National Officer for the Arts Council of Great Britain. She was an important source of encouragement to younger Scottish composers, taking more than her fair share of administrative work. Although she is best remembered for her work for the Saltire Society, in particular her founding of the Saltire Music Group and Saltire Singers, Isobel Dunlop’s contribution as a composer deserves re-evaluation. Her works include a one-act opera, The Silhouette (1954), as well as a number of keyboard and vocal works, including cantatas. Her Fantasy String Quartet, depicting the four seasons, was commissioned by the University of Glasgow and performed at the 1972 McEwen Memorial concert. jp • SMIC: Music scores and recordings. Dunlop, I., Works as above. Who’s Who in Music (1969); Grove’s Dictionary of Music and Musicians (1954); McLeod, J. (1975) ‘Regional report – Scotland’, Composer, 55, pp. 39–40. DUNLOP, Marion WallaceMarion (1864–1942)

see WALLACE-DUNLOP,

DUNMORE, Catherine, Countess of see MURRAY, Catherine, Countess of Dunmore (1814–1886) DUNNETT, Dorothy n. Halliday, OBE, born Dunfermline 25 August 1923, died Edinburgh 9 Nov. 2001. Artist and author. Daughter of Evelyn Millard, and Alick Halliday, mining engineer. Dorothy Halliday was educated at James Gillespie’s High School, Edinburgh, then Edinburgh College of Art and Glasgow School of Art. In 1940 she became assistant press officer for Scottish Government Departments (1940–6) and worked for the Board of Trade Scottish Economics Department, Glasgow (1946–65). On 17 September 1946 she married Alistair M. Dunnett (1908–98),

author, playwright and editor of The Scotsman from 1956. They had two children. From 1950 she was a professional portrait painter, exhibiting at the RSA. She began to write ten years later, after the death of her father. The Game of Kings (1961) was the first title in Dorothy Dunnett’s series of six novels chronicling the life of the fictional hero Francis Crawford of Lymond, a 16th-century Scottish soldier of fortune, who, like his author, travelled from his native Scotland to France, Turkey and Russia. As she said, ‘the Lymond books became a tremendous cult’ (Renton 1989, p. 2). Another series, set in 15th-century Europe, features Niccolo, an apprentice from Bruges, who becomes a successful Renaissance entrepreneur. Niccolo also follows in his author’s footsteps, this time to Geneva, Milan, Trebizond and Cyprus. Dorothy Dunnett’s historical novels are meticulously researched; their achievement is in the vivid reconstructions of place and period and accuracy of detail, combined with an appeal to a huge and enthusiastic readership. In King Hereafter (1982), which began as a work of historical scholarship but due to the pressure of deadlines became a novel, she suggested, controversially, that Earl Thorfinn of Orkney and King Macbeth were the same man. She also published, as Dorothy Halliday, a series of witty thrillers focused on the yacht Dolly and its enigmatic master Johnston Johnston, a secret agent and portrait painter. Measures of her popularity are the two-volume Dorothy Dunnett Companion (1994, 2002), the Dunnett fanzine, established in 1961, and the association of her fans, the Dorothy Dunnett Readers’ Association. She maintained a lifelong involvement with the arts in Scotland, later serving as trustee of the NLS and a director of the Edinburgh Book Festival. She became Lady Dunnett when her husband was knighted in 1995, and was awarded the OBE for services to literature in 1992. me • NLS: Acc. 12135, 12136. Dorothy Dunnett archive. Dunnett, D. ‘Lymond’ series (1961) The Game of Kings to (1975) Checkmate, ‘Dolly’ series (1968) Dolly and the Singing Bird to (1983) Dolly and the Bird of Paradise, ‘Niccolo’ series (1986) Niccolo Rising to (2000) Gemini. ECSWW; HSWW (Bibl.); Morrison, E. (ed) (2002) Dorothy Dunnett Companion, vol 2 (Bibl.); eODNB; Renton, J. (1989) The Scottish Book Collector, Issue 12, pp. 2-4 (interview).

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E born possibly York, 20 April 626, died Whitby after 685. Queen of Bernicia, later ­co-abbess of Streanaeshalch/Whitby. Daughter of AeDilburg daughter of AeDilberct, and Edwini, King of Deira and Bernicia. Daughter of a Christian mother and a father about to convert, Eanfled was the first of her father’s people to be baptised. Her family fled to Kent at her father’s death in 633, but she returned in the 640s to marry Oswy of Bernicia (611/12–670), son of her father’s enemy. Oswy’s kingdom included much of northern England and southern Scotland. Eanfled proved an outspoken and successful queen. Though Oswy had at least one son already by his first wife *Raegnmaeld, it was Eanfled’s sons who inherited. Her daughters *OsthryD and *Aelffled were remarkable in their own right. Eanfled openly criticised Oswy when his client murdered a king who was her kinsman, and opposed his support of unorthodox ecclesiastical practices. This led to the adoption of Roman rather than ‘Celtic’ practices in the Bernician church at the Council of Whitby. The importance of Eanfled’s influence upon Bernicia, and through Oswy’s imperialism upon the spiritual life of much of Britain, was recognised by papal letter. When Oswy died in 670, Eanfled retired to Streanaeshalch/ Whitby, where Aelffled was a nun; in 680 she and Aelffled became coabbesses. Eanfled was buried there. Commemorated as a saint, her feast day was 24 November. jef EANFLED,

• BEHEP; Colgrave, B. (ed.) (1927) The Life of Bishop Wilfrid; ODNB (2004) (Eanflœd). EARDLEY, Joan Kathleen Harding,‡

born Warnham, Sussex 18 May 1921, died Killearn Hospital, near Glasgow, 16 August 1963. Artist. Daughter of Irene Morrison, and Capt. William Eardley, dairy farmer. Joan Eardley’s father, who had been gassed in the trenches, took his own life in 1929, and the family moved to Blackheath, London. At art school in 1938, her teacher was ‘convinced that Joan had a unique career in front of her’ (Connell 1975, p. 3). Money was tight, but she applied to Glasgow School of Art in 1939 and studied under Hugh Adam Crawford (1940–3). War work, painting camouflage on ships, interrupted her studies. In 1947, after a summer school tutored

by James Cowie, she spent her diploma year in Italy and France. Her travelling companion, Bronwen Pulsford, remembered her persistence: ‘she managed to get into places where I would have given up’ (SNGMA 1983, p. 2). From the start, Joan Eardley tackled varied subjects, working in the countryside while being attracted to city subjects and keeping in touch with contemporary work. In Glasgow, she exhibited drawings of Italy; and from 1949 worked from a cramped studio there. She was inspired by the Samsons, tenement children who dropped by to see her, and whom she drew, painted and photographed playing. In 1952, photographer (Lady) Audrey Walker began providing photographs of buildings and ephemeral graffiti which Joan Eardley built into her urban compositions. The realism of her urban works, in oil, pastels and collage, has been compared to that of avant-garde cinema and television (Pearson 1988, pp. 11–12). In 1950, she discovered Catterline (Kincardineshire), the fishing community with which her name has become identified. From a weather-beaten cottage there, she worked urgently, outside, often in adverse conditions, on large and stormy seascapes in oils, even ‘leaving a painting out of doors so that the elements themselves could add the final touches’ (Oliver 1984, n.p.). Wide canvases were used to powerful effect when she depicted vegetation and grasses, and the impasto bears traces of seeds. A regular exhibitor in Scotland, she also joined the SSA committee for the De Stael exhibition (1956). Douglas Hall noted Joan Eardley’s ‘carelessness of frills’ (1977, p. iii). In Glasgow she pushed her easel and paints round in a pram, and was accepted in Catterline as doing an honest day’s work, striking up friendly acquaintance with country people. Close friends included Margot Sandeman (later Robson), Audrey Walker, and the painter Angus Neil, her model in the 1950s and the subject of her only known figure painting of an adult: ‘Sleeping Nude’ 1954–5. (The popular press opined that a ‘Girl Artist’ was ‘fast’ to have undertaken, let alone shown, such a work.) Increasing illness in 1962 was faced stoically. Joan Eardley’s work was not divided up into periods of subject matter. It was recognised nationally in Scotland in her lifetime,

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and inter­national recognition had started by the time of her early death: her work was reviewed in New York. An Associate RSA in 1955, she was elected RSA in 1963. Posthumously, Joan Eardley’s stature has grown hugely: she has been described as ‘world-class’ (Hall 1969) and ‘a great painter in the European tradition’ (Macmillan 1994, pp. 88–9), for her handling and understanding of the ‘dramatic intensity’ of landscape intensity’ of landscape. In 2007, the NGS mounted a major retrospective, curated by Fiona Pearson (see Pearson 2007); another in 2016–17 (see Elliott 2016) attracted further attention nationally and internationally. heb • SNGMA Archive: GMA A09, corr., etc., incl. Pulsford, B. (1983), ‘A reminiscence of Joan Eardley’ [unpub.]; holdings of Eardley’s works presented by her sister. Andreae, C. (2013) Joan Eardley; Connell, C. (1975) ‘The life of Joan Eardley, RSA (1921–63)’, unpub. thesis, Gray’s School of Art; Elliot, P. (2016) Joan Eardley: a sense of place; Hall, D. (1969) (intro. Catalogue) Four Contemporary Scottish Painters: Eardley, Haig, Philipson, Pulford, Ashmolean, Oxford, (1977) Exhibition of Paintings by Joan Eardley, Univ. of Stirling; Macmillan, D. (1994) Scottish Art in the 20th Century; Morgan, E. (1962) ‘To Joan Eardley’, Lines Review, 18; Oliver, C. (1964) Joan Eardley RSA, Memorial Exhibition, (1984) (Catalogue) Catterline: Joan Eardley and her Contemporaries, St Andrews, (1988) Joan Eardley, RSA (Bibl.); ODNB (2004); Pearson, F. (1988) Joan Eardley, 1921–1963, (2007) Joan Eardley; Scottish Gallery (2015) Joan Eardley in Context. EATON, Charlotte Ann

(1788–1859)

see WALDIE, Charlotte Ann

EGLINTON, Susanna, Countess of see MONTGOMERIE, Susanna, Countess of Eglinton (1689/90–1780) ELDER, Isabella, n. Ure, born Gorbals, Glasgow, 15 March 1828, died Glasgow 18 Nov. 1905. Philanthropist and supporter of higher education for women. Daughter of Mary Ross, and Alexander Ure, solicitor. In 1857 Isabella Ure married John Elder ­(1824–69), who became a famous marine engineer and shipbuilder. His design of the compound engine enabled ships to travel further on less coal, opening up trade throughout the world. His shipyard, John Elder, Fairfield in Govan, employed more than 5,000 men and had the greatest output on the Clyde when he died, aged 45, leaving Isabella Elder the sole owner. She maintained the yard’s success for nine months until her brother, John Francis Ure, a celebrated harbour engineer at

Newcastle-on-Tyne, took over the management of the business. A wealthy woman with no children, she used her fortune to benefit others; she was ‘a wise benefactress of the public and of learning’ (The Bailie 1883). At the University of Glasgow she endowed the chair of naval architecture in 1883, and when Queen Margaret College for women was constituted in 1883 she bought North Park House (subsequently BBC Scotland), giving it to the college as rent-free premises. There is no information about her own education but she delivered effective addresses and wrote well-constructed letters. She was especially interested in medical education and in 1890 QMC opened a medical school for which she paid the running costs. Concerned lest women received inferior instruction at QMC compared with men at the university she strove to maintain standards, corresponding with the Principal and informally liaising between the university and the college. In 1901 she was awarded an honorary LLD by the university. In Govan, she established a School for Domestic Economy in 1885 for poor girls and women, provided the Elder Park and built and financed the Elder Cottage Hospital and Elder Free Library. Always known as Mrs John Elder, she was described as ‘a remarkable woman, possessing unusual ability combined with a strong head, a strong will and a most tender and sympathetic heart’ (Macleod 1907). Glasgow’s first woman medical graduate, *Dr Marion Gilchrist, signed her death certificate. She is commemorated by a statue in the flower garden of the Elder Park, Govan, where there is also a statue of John Elder, both erected by public subscription, as well as on the gates in University Avenue to mark the fifth centenary of the University of Glasgow, and the Isabella Elder Building, University of Glasgow. She is also depicted in a stained glass window in the university’s Bute Hall. cjm • Univ. of Glasgow Archives: QMC Collection DC233. The Bailie, 1883, No. 582; McAlpine, C. J. (1997) The Lady of Claremont House ; Macleod, D., Glasgow Herald, 20 and 23 Nov. 1907; *ODNB (2004). ELDER, Margaret Moffat (Madge), born Portobello near Edinburgh, 17 July 1893, died Edinburgh 25 Dec. 1985. Gardener, nurserywoman and writer. Daughter of Margaret Virtue, and John Elder, marine engineer. Brought up on a farm in Berwickshire, Madge Elder was educated at Gordon village

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school. Deafness made her completely reliant on lip-­reading. In 1912, she was one of the first students to graduate from the Edinburgh School of Gardening for Women in Corstorphine, Edinburgh – Scotland’s first horticultural college for women, which opened in 1904 and ran until 1930. Its founders were Lina Barker and Annie Morison, who had graduated from Swanley Horticultural College for Women, Kent, in 1897 and became the first female trainees at the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (RBGE). Madge Elder graduated with a first-class certificate in horticulture. She worked as a gardener at Fox Covert in Corstorphine and the Priory at Melrose before becoming head gardener at Bowhill, Selkirk, home of the Duke of Buccleuch, at that time a convalescent home for wounded officers. Following work at Chiefswood House, Melrose, she opened her own hardy plant nursery. She ran the business for almost 30 years, continuing to work as a freelance gardener specialising in rock garden design. She also wrote regularly for the Weekly Scotsman and The Scots Magazine. After retiring from gardening in 1948, she published two books on the history and folklore of the Borders, Tell the Towers Thereof (1956) and Ballad Country (1963). She saw a link between the suffrage movement and pioneering women gardeners: ‘a band of young women set on pioneering a new career for women, that of professional gardening . . . We were all of a generation born into the last decade of the Victorian era, a period when the pioneering spirit in women was strong, and when we joined the Edinburgh School of Gardening for Women in 1910 the suffragettes were at their most militant.’ (Elder 1974). fy

f­ ollowing her affair with Arthur Annesley, Viscount Valentia, her husband divorced her in a much publicised case. Grace Eliot then spent some time in France, but returned to England with the 4th Earl of Cholmondley, one of her many lovers. Mixing in high society, and known as ‘Dally the Tall’, she became mistress of the Prince of Wales (later George IV), who may have been the father of her daughter, Georgiana Augusta Frederica Seymour (b. 1782). In 1786, Grace Eliot settled near Paris, where she was for a time mistress of the duc d’Orléans (Philippe Égalité), cousin of Louis XVI. She remained there throughout the French Revolution, and wrote an account of her experiences. Her reliability must be questioned as her Journal of my life during the French Revolution (written in 1801, published by her grand-daughter in 1859) contains many inaccuracies, and she undoubtedly exaggerated her experiences. Nevertheless, it is an enthralling and detailed memoir which, given her social position and her friendship with Orléans, also contains much of interest. She certainly spent some time in prison during the Terror. Grace Eliot went back to England after the Revolution, but later returned to France, and died near Sèvres. Interest in her story was revived in 2001 by Eric Rohmer’s film L’Anglaise et le Duc (‘The Englishwoman [sic] and the Duke’), based on her journal. fj • Eliot, G. D., Work as above. eODNB. ELIZABETH, Angela Marguerite, Queen and Queen Mother, n. Bowes-Lyon, born probably London

• RBGE staff records, 1897. Elder, M., Works as above, and ‘First of the female cultivators’, The Scotsman, 14 August 1973; (1974) ‘We were the pioneers’, The Scots Magazine, pp. 640–8. Cowper, A. S. (1992) Historic Corstorphine; The Scotsman, 31 Dec. 1985 (Appreciation). ELIOT (or ELLIOT), Grace, n. Dalrymple,

born probably in Edinburgh c. 1754, died Ville d’Avray, France, 16 May 1823. Courtesan. Daughter of Grisel Craw, and Hew Dalrymple, Edinburgh advocate. Grace Dalrymple’s parents separated in 1758, and some of her childhood was spent in a convent in France or Flanders. In October 1771 she married John (later Sir John) Eliot (1736–86), a Scottish doctor whom she had met at her father’s house. Their only child died in infancy and in 1774,

4 August 1900, died Windsor 30 March 2002. Daughter of Nina Cecilia Cavendish-Bentinck, and Sir Claude George Bowes-Lyon, Lord Glamis, later 14th Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne. Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, the ninth of ten children, grew up partly at Glamis Castle, developing a lifelong love of Scotland and the outdoors. She met Albert (Bertie), Duke of York (1895–1952) in May 1920. Shy, with a stammer, considered less eligible than his brother, the Prince of Wales, Bertie proposed, and was accepted on the third time of asking. They were married on 26 April 1923 in Westminster Abbey. Her spontaneous gesture of placing her bouquet on the unknown soldier’s tomb has been copied by every royal bride since. They had two daughters, Elizabeth Alexandra Mary, born 21 April 1926, and *Margaret Rose (1930–2002) (see Snowdon). In December 1936, Bertie’s brother, now Edward VIII, abdicated to marry American

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­ ivorcée Wallis Simpson. The Duke of York sucd ceeded as George VI, and his duchess became Queen Consort. Distressed that her shy husband had been thrust into this position, she was determined to support him (and did not forgive the Windsors). Her personality and loyalty enhanced the royal family’s image, particularly during the Second World War, when she refused to leave the country or to send her daughters overseas. Remaining in London, they shared some of the privations of ordinary citizens, visiting soldiers, factories and bombsites. When Buckingham Palace was bombed, the Queen was famously reported as saying, ‘We can now look the East End in the face’. When, in 1952, George VI died and Princess Elizabeth became Queen, her mother took the title ‘HRH Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother’, shortened by press and public to ‘the Queen Mother’ or ‘Queen Mum’. She bought the Castle of Mey, a 16th-century castle in Caithness, where she spent part of each year. Her enthusiasm for her public duties never waned. Privately, she was close to her grandson, Prince Charles. The troubled relationships of the younger generation distressed her, as did the decline of respect for the royal family, but she herself continued to enjoy much admiration. Her extravagance and fondness of gin and horse racing were criticised, but were also the subject of affectionate humour. Her 100th birthday celebrations took place in 2000, and her final public appearance was, stoically, at her daughter Princess Margaret’s funeral. When, soon afterwards, she died herself, long queues formed to pay respects at her lying-in-state. She was buried at Windsor. fj • Forbes, G. (2002) Elizabeth the Queen Mother: a twentieth century life ; The Observer, 31 March 2002; ODNB (2004) (George VI); Pimlott, B. (1996) The Queen: a biography of Elizabeth II; The Scotsman, 10 April 2002 (supp.); The Times, 1 April 2002; www.royal.gov.uk (official website of the royal family).

born probably Down or Antrim, Ireland, before 1302, died Cullen 26 Oct. 1327. Daughter of Margaret de Burgh, and Richard de Burgh, Earl of Ulster. In 1302, Elizabeth de Burgh married the widowed Robert Bruce (1274–1329), whose first wife Isabel, daughter of Donald, 6th Earl of Mar, had given birth to a daughter, *Marjory Bruce, in the 1290s. Typical of the unions that so often shaped the life cycles of medieval noblewomen, Elizabeth’s marriage was arranged primarily to satisfy the diverse political aspirations of her father,

ELIZABETH DE BURGH, Queen of Scotland,

her husband, and Edward I of England. Her importance as a political asset became clear in the aftermath of Robert Bruce’s seizure of the throne in 1306. Captured at Tain in the company of her sisters-in-law, Mary and *Christian Bruce, her step-daughter, Marjory, and *Isobel of Fife, Countess of Buchan, Elizabeth was sent into confinement in England, first to Burstwick, then to a series of other locations, where she remained a political prisoner for over eight years. She was released only in January 1315, in exchange for valuable English captives taken at the battle of Bannockburn. Elizabeth de Burgh was the mother of Bruce’s surviving children, David II, born in 1324, and two daughters. She predeceased her husband. cjn • Barrow, G. W. S. (1988) Robert Bruce ; McNeill, T. E. (1980) Anglo-Norman Ulster ; Neville, C. J. (1993) ‘Widows of war: Edward I and the women of Scotland during the War of Independence’, in S. S. Walker (ed.) Wife and Widow in Medieval England; ODNB (2004). ELLIOT, Jean, born Minto House, near Hawick April 1727, died Mount Teviot, Roxburghshire, 29 March 1805. Poet. Daughter of Helen Stewart, and Sir Gilbert Elliot, Lord Minto, Lord Justice. Best remembered for the ballad ‘The Flowers of the Forest’, Jean Elliot was well educated at home. In 1745, Jacobite soldiers came to Minto to arrest Sir Gilbert, whom they regarded as a ‘Hanoverian Laird’, but the 18-year-old Jean was able to implore the soldiers to abandon their investigation while her father hid in a ruined castle. Ten years later, in the shadow of Culloden, the daughter of the ‘Hanoverian Laird’ wrote a ballad on a dare from her brother Gilbert, also a songwriter, who wagered a pair of gloves and a set of ribbons if the work demonstrated any artistic merit. Built around some surviving lines from an old Scots ballad, Jean Elliot’s ‘Flowers’ is one of three ballads of that name (one by *Alison Cockburn), and is perhaps the most valuable of the three because ‘the Scots vocabulary and rhythm preserve elements of the older tradition’ (Kerrigan 1991, p. 6). A tribute to the male population of Ettrick Forest who perished at the Battle of Flodden in 1513, the ballad touchingly sums up the grief felt throughout the nation. Published anonymously in 1755, the ballad became immensely popular and is still often piped at funerals. Jean Elliot also wrote other poems. Moving to Edinburgh with her mother in the 1760s, she returned to Roxburghshire shortly before her death. jjw

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ESSLEMONT • Elliot, G. F. S. (1897) The Border Elliots and the Family of Minto; HSWW; Kerrigan, C. (ed.) (1991) An Anthology of Scottish Women Poets, (1991) ‘Reclaiming history: the ballad as a women’s tradition’, Études Écossaises 1; ODNB (2004); Tytler, S. and Watson, J. L. (1871) The Songstresses of Scotland. ERMENGARDE de Beaumont, Queen of Scotland,

born before 1186, died Balmerino Abbey, Fife, 11 Feb. 1233. Daughter of Richard, Vicomte de Beaumont-sur-Sarthe, France. In 1186, Henry II of England chose Ermengarde de Beaumont, a distant kinswoman from a relatively insignificant family, to be the bride of William, King of Scots (c. 1142–1214). They were married near Oxford on 5 September 1186, and had three daughters, *Margaret of Scotland, Isabella and Marjory (see Margaret of Scotland), and one son, the future Alexander II. There is little information regarding Ermengarde’s political life until 1212, when she may have accompanied William to Durham to mediate with King John. That year, she was unusually active in Scottish affairs, due to William’s illness, presiding with Bishop Malveisin over a court case involving Dunfermline Abbey and attaching her seal to the decision. After William’s death in 1214, she devoted herself to pious works including founding, in 1229, Balmerino Abbey, where she was buried. kp • Anderson, A. O. (1922) Early Sources of Scottish History, ad 500–1286; Barrow, G. W. S. (ed.) (1971) Regesta Regum Scottorum, ii. Acts of William I, King of Scots; Duncan, A. A. M. (1996) Scotland: the making of the kingdom; Nelson, J. (2007) ‘Scottish queenship in the thirteenth century’ in B. Weiler et al. (eds) Thirteenth Century England XI; ODNB (2004); Owen, D. D. R. (1997) William the Lion. ERSKINE, Mary (aka ‘Arskine’ etc.), m1 Kennedy, m2 Hair, born 1629, died 2 July 1707. Businesswoman,

philanthropist, early supporter of female education. Mary Erskine’s first marriage was in 1661 to Robert Kennedy, a writer, who died in 1671; her second was in 1675 to James Hair, a druggist (apothecary), who died in 1683. She had one daughter, Euphame. On the death of her first husband, Mary Erskine became a shopkeeper; on the death of her second, she paid off his debts and became a successful businesswoman. She let property and was a moneylender (also described as a private banker) to businessmen, professionals, and to some women, usually widows continuing their husbands’ business, or starting their own. In 1694, she responded generously to a proposal by the Edinburgh Merchant Company to establish

a foundation in the Cowgate, Edinburgh, for the schooling of the daughters of Edinburgh burgesses. The aim was to board and educate orphaned, impoverished girls of the city’s middle classes. The Merchant Maiden Hospital was founded on 4 June 1694. In 1706, she purchased land and buildings for the Hospital, and on her death in 1707, bequeathed a considerable sum to the foundation, and a similar sum to the Incorporations of Trades who had followed the example of the Company of Merchants to found their own (Trades’) Maiden Hospital. Her foundation became the Edinburgh Ladies’ College in 1896, then in 1944 Mary Erskine School – one of the oldest girls’ schools in the world. Mary Erskine was buried in Greyfriars Churchyard, Edinburgh. jm c d • Skinner, L. (1994) A Family Unbroken, 1694–1994: the Mary Erskine School tercentenary history; Sommerville, M. K. B. (1970, repr. 1993) The Merchant Maiden Hospital. www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk ESSLEMONT, Mary,‡

CBE, born Aberdeen 3 July 1891, died Aberdeen 25 August 1984. GP and activist. Daughter of Clementina Macdonald, and George Birnie Esslemont, Liberal MP, owners of Aberdeen’s first department store. Mary Esslemont’s mother, Clementina May Macdonald (1864–1958), was active in many political and social welfare causes including the foundation of the Aberdeen Mother and Child Welfare Association in 1909. She received an OBE in 1939, an honorary LLD in 1941 and was a Justice of the Peace. Like both her parents, Mary Esslemont was committed to Liberal causes, becoming life President of the Scottish Young Liberals.She graduated BSc (1914), MA (1915), MBChB (1923) at the University of Aberdeen, taught science in London 1915–19, and took a Diploma in Public Health there in 1924. After working as Assistant MOH at Keighley, Yorkshire, she returned to Aberdeen in 1929 as a pioneering woman GP. Her practice was in the West End, but many of her patients came from the poorer parts of the city and when ‘Dr Mary’ made home visits to them in winter it was with blankets and a sack of coal in the boot of her car. She was a founding member of the Royal College of General Practitioners, and in 1970 Vice President of the BMA. Another strand in her life was her attachment to her university. As a mature student, she was elected President of the Student Representative Council in 1922 (there was no other woman President until 1989). She was also the first woman elected to the

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University Court, from 1946 to 1974, receiving an Honorary LLD in 1954. In her later years, Mary Esslemont was remarkable for her commitment to the cause of women’s rights in Scotland, working (voluntarily) for UN International Women’s Year in 1975, and thereafter taking an active part in the Scottish Convention of Women (SCOW). SCOW, a voluntary organisation bringing together traditional and more radical women’s groups, was instrumental in changing the culture of government in Scotland, being represented on the Scottish Constitutional Convention. ‘Dr Mary’ was one of its most energetic promoters in the north. This hardworking and influential life led to a CBE in 1955, and to the Freedom of the City of Aberdeen in 1981. JJC/ATM

Euphemia’s widowed niece Euphemia, Countess 1370–1394/98) married the Queen’s stepson Alexander Stewart, Earl of Buchan, as her second husband in 1382. The marriage was unhappy and childless. From 1389 she initiated divorce proceedings against him, a factor in his burning of Elgin Cathedral in 1390. She obtained a separation in 1392. Her son from her first marriage succeeded her. SB of Ross (fl.

• Boardman, S. (1996) The Early Stewart Kings; *ODNB (2004) (Bibl.); Hayes, A. (2016) ‘The Scottish Queen, c. 1371–c. 1513 (PhD thesis, University of Aberdeen).

• AUL: archives, MS 3179 Mary Esslemont Papers, MS 3620/1–3 Interview (1984), Roll of Graduates. Ritchie, S. (1994) ‘Dr Mary Esslemont’, Aberdeen University Review, LV, 4, 192. Private information. EUPHEMIA of Ross, Queen of Scotland, born

fl. 1304. Property owner and garrison-supplier. Evota of Stirling, probably a widow, held a small parcel of land near Stirling. Between 1297 and 1304, Stirling Castle alternated between Scottish and English control during the War of Independence; the English retook it on 20 July 1304. Evota, who it seems had fallen on difficult times, eked out a living by providing the English garrison with victuals and supplies from the surrounding countryside. When her activities were discovered by the townspeople, she was jailed for ten weeks, stripped of her property, and banished from Scotland. She appealed to Edward I of England in July 1304, asking for compensation or the return of her property in view of her services to the English. The King told her to petition his officials in Scotland, but the result is unknown. sem

EVOTA (EVE) of Stirling,

c. 1329, died 1388/9. Daughter of Margaret Graham, and Hugh, Earl of Ross. Euphemia of Ross may have been born before her parents obtained a retrospective legitimation of their marriage in November 1329. Her first husband was John Randolph, Earl of Moray (d. 1346). In 1355 she married Robert the Steward (1316–90), who was crowned as Robert II on 26 March 1371. Euphemia’s coronation was delayed until a date between 6 December 1372 and 24 March 1373. Euphemia and Robert had two sons, David and Walter, and at least two daughters, Egidia and Elizabeth. The King also had three sons by his first wife, Elizabeth Mure – John (the future Robert III who married *Annabella Drummond), Robert and Alexander. The place of David and Walter in the royal succession was stated in an entail of 4 April 1373; only after the failure of the male lines descending from Robert II’s first marriage could they or their male heirs succeed. It is likely significant that Euphemia was not crowned until shortly before it was made. There is no evidence that Euphemia exercised any particular ­influence as queen, perhaps because she was not the mother of the next heir to the throne. Her sons were beneficiaries of substantial patronage but Euphemia herself was granted no lands. In 1373 she was awarded a generous annuity of 3,500 merks but this was rarely paid in full and she may have struggled to pay her debts.

• Calendar of Documents Relating to Scotland (1888–1986) iv, no. 1800; v, no. 521. Goldstein, R. J. (1991) ‘The women of the Wars of Independence in literature and history’, in Studies in Scottish Literature 26, p. 275; Marshall, R. (1983) Virgins and Viragos, p. 49. EWING, Margaret Anne,‡ n. McAdam, m1 Bain, m2 Ewing, born Lanark 1 Sept. 1945, died Lossiemouth

21 March 2006. Teacher, politician, journalist. Daughter of Margaret (Peggie) Lamb, and John McAdam, farm worker. After high school in Biggar, and a French degree from the University of Glasgow, Margaret McAdam studied special-needs education at Jordanhill College – a lifelong interest. Having married Donald Bain, the SNP’s research officer, she was teaching remedial education at Stirling’s St Modan’s High School when, as SNP candidate, she displaced the sitting Conservative in East Dunbartonshire in the second general election of 1974. The SNP was riding high, on the claim

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‘It’s Scotland’s Oil’, sending an unprecedented 11 MPs to parliament. Margaret Bain won by only 22 votes – the smallest margin in the country. She lost the seat to Labour in 1979, saying: ‘Becoming an MP changed my life [. . .] I simply can’t revert to square one. Five years ago I was married and a teacher. Now I’m getting divorced and don’t want to go back to teaching’ (Scotsman, 1979). Nor did she. A popular parliamentarian, an approachable and respected constituency MP, and – when out of office – an able newspaper commentator, she returned to the House of Commons in 1987, representing Moray there until 2001, and

at Holyrood from 1999 until her premature death from cancer. In 1983 she had married fellow nationalist Fergus Ewing, son of the SNP ‘matriarch’, Winnie Ewing. There were no children from either marriage. An instinctive ally of the underprivileged, Margaret Ewing played a conspicuous part in SNP politics, losing a leadership election to Alex Salmond (1990). Her political priorities were European affairs and social issues. JWD • ‘What happens to MPs when the House is no longer a home?’, The Scotsman, 25 June 1979; The Press and Journal, 22 March 2006, The Guardian, 23 March 2006, The Herald, 22 March 2006 (obits); eODNB.

F FAIRFIELD, Cecily (or Cicily) Isabel (aka Cissie, Panther) [Rebecca West, Rachel East, Conway Power], DBE, m. Andrews, born London 21 Dec.

1892, died London 15 March 1983. Journalist, novelist, critic, travel-writer, feminist and political commentator. Daughter of Isabella Campbell Mackenzie, governess, pianist and copy-typist, and Charles Fairfield, Irish-born soldier, journalist and entrepreneur. After Charles Fairfield abandoned the family in 1901 (dying in 1906), their mother took the three children from London to her native Edinburgh, where they lived in Hope Park Square (represented in Rebecca West’s novel, The Judge) and Buccleuch Place. Cecily Fairfield was educated as a scholarship student at George Watson’s Ladies’ College, winning ‘Best Essay’ prize, 1906–7. She campaigned for women’s suffrage and at 14 published a letter in The Scotsman (16 October 1907) on ‘Women’s Electoral Claims’, writing later: ‘Scotland has come out of the militant suffrage agitation very well indeed. There is something magnificently dramatic about the way the Scottish woman . . . has quietly gone about her warfare’ (West [1911] 1982, p.192). Her first, unpublished, novel, ‘The Sentinel’, written in her late teens, portrays its heroine’s sexual and political awakening during suffrage unrest. The Judge (1922), featuring a young Edinburgh suffragette, was described by Hugh MacDiarmid as ‘unfortunately – the best Scottish novel of recent years’ (MacDiarmid, [1926], 1995, p. 346). Cecily was the youngest of three siblings. Her sister Josephine Letitia (Lettie) Denny Fairfield

(1885–1978) qualified in medicine, Edinburgh 1907, then studied law and became a medical administrator; she supervised women doctors in the First World War and was made CBE in 1919. Winifred (Winnie) Fairfield (1887–1960), to whom Cecily was close, trained as a teacher. All three sisters, young socialists and suffragists, joined the Fabian Society. The family moved back to London in 1910, where 17-year-old Cecily studied for a year at the Academy of Dramatic Art in London and worked briefly as an actor. She soon turned to journalism, publishing her first theatre review in the Evening Standard and writing for a new feminist journal, The Freewoman. Taking the pseudonym ‘Rebecca West’ from a strong-willed character in Ibsen’s play Rosmersholm, she swiftly established a reputation with her often iconoclastic writing; other pieces appeared in the Daily News and socialist Clarion. Her journalism led to a fateful meeting. After reviewing H. G. Wells’s novel Marriage (1912), Rebecca West, aged 19, met the famous author, then 46 and married. An intense, troubled, ten-year relationship began in 1913, and their son Anthony Panther West was born in 1914. Single motherhood was difficult, and the relationship deteriorated; her relationship with Anthony West (1914–87), later a writer himself, also grew recriminatory. Her first published book, a study of Henry James (1916), was followed by a novel, The Return of the Soldier (1918). Eight novels were published during her lifetime, notably The Fountain 135

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‘It’s Scotland’s Oil’, sending an unprecedented 11 MPs to parliament. Margaret Bain won by only 22 votes – the smallest margin in the country. She lost the seat to Labour in 1979, saying: ‘Becoming an MP changed my life [. . .] I simply can’t revert to square one. Five years ago I was married and a teacher. Now I’m getting divorced and don’t want to go back to teaching’ (Scotsman, 1979). Nor did she. A popular parliamentarian, an approachable and respected constituency MP, and – when out of office – an able newspaper commentator, she returned to the House of Commons in 1987, representing Moray there until 2001, and

at Holyrood from 1999 until her premature death from cancer. In 1983 she had married fellow nationalist Fergus Ewing, son of the SNP ‘matriarch’, Winnie Ewing. There were no children from either marriage. An instinctive ally of the underprivileged, Margaret Ewing played a conspicuous part in SNP politics, losing a leadership election to Alex Salmond (1990). Her political priorities were European affairs and social issues. JWD • ‘What happens to MPs when the House is no longer a home?’, The Scotsman, 25 June 1979; The Press and Journal, 22 March 2006, The Guardian, 23 March 2006, The Herald, 22 March 2006 (obits); eODNB.

F FAIRFIELD, Cecily (or Cicily) Isabel (aka Cissie, Panther) [Rebecca West, Rachel East, Conway Power], DBE, m. Andrews, born London 21 Dec.

1892, died London 15 March 1983. Journalist, novelist, critic, travel-writer, feminist and political commentator. Daughter of Isabella Campbell Mackenzie, governess, pianist and copy-typist, and Charles Fairfield, Irish-born soldier, journalist and entrepreneur. After Charles Fairfield abandoned the family in 1901 (dying in 1906), their mother took the three children from London to her native Edinburgh, where they lived in Hope Park Square (represented in Rebecca West’s novel, The Judge) and Buccleuch Place. Cecily Fairfield was educated as a scholarship student at George Watson’s Ladies’ College, winning ‘Best Essay’ prize, 1906–7. She campaigned for women’s suffrage and at 14 published a letter in The Scotsman (16 October 1907) on ‘Women’s Electoral Claims’, writing later: ‘Scotland has come out of the militant suffrage agitation very well indeed. There is something magnificently dramatic about the way the Scottish woman . . . has quietly gone about her warfare’ (West [1911] 1982, p.192). Her first, unpublished, novel, ‘The Sentinel’, written in her late teens, portrays its heroine’s sexual and political awakening during suffrage unrest. The Judge (1922), featuring a young Edinburgh suffragette, was described by Hugh MacDiarmid as ‘unfortunately – the best Scottish novel of recent years’ (MacDiarmid, [1926], 1995, p. 346). Cecily was the youngest of three siblings. Her sister Josephine Letitia (Lettie) Denny Fairfield

(1885–1978) qualified in medicine, Edinburgh 1907, then studied law and became a medical administrator; she supervised women doctors in the First World War and was made CBE in 1919. Winifred (Winnie) Fairfield (1887–1960), to whom Cecily was close, trained as a teacher. All three sisters, young socialists and suffragists, joined the Fabian Society. The family moved back to London in 1910, where 17-year-old Cecily studied for a year at the Academy of Dramatic Art in London and worked briefly as an actor. She soon turned to journalism, publishing her first theatre review in the Evening Standard and writing for a new feminist journal, The Freewoman. Taking the pseudonym ‘Rebecca West’ from a strong-willed character in Ibsen’s play Rosmersholm, she swiftly established a reputation with her often iconoclastic writing; other pieces appeared in the Daily News and socialist Clarion. Her journalism led to a fateful meeting. After reviewing H. G. Wells’s novel Marriage (1912), Rebecca West, aged 19, met the famous author, then 46 and married. An intense, troubled, ten-year relationship began in 1913, and their son Anthony Panther West was born in 1914. Single motherhood was difficult, and the relationship deteriorated; her relationship with Anthony West (1914–87), later a writer himself, also grew recriminatory. Her first published book, a study of Henry James (1916), was followed by a novel, The Return of the Soldier (1918). Eight novels were published during her lifetime, notably The Fountain 135

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Overflows (1956), drawing on childhood memories. Three more were published posthumously. Rebecca West’s non-fiction is particularly celebrated. She contributed to many British newspapers and ­journals, among them the feminist journal Time and Tide in the 1920s. A frequent visitor to the USA, she also wrote for major American publications including Herald-Tribune. Her greatest achievement is widely considered to be Black Lamb and Grey Falcon (1941), drawing on visits to Yugoslavia in the 1930s and inspired especially by the history, culture and people of Serbia, suffering Nazi occupation when the book was published. Her near contemporary, Scottish ethnographer Margaret Hasluck, n. Hardie (1885–1948), was carrying out sustained, scholarly work in nearby Albania in the 1930s, and later advised Special Operations Executive (Clark 2000). Rebecca West’s reporting of Nuremberg and other treason trials resulted in the highly regarded The Meaning of Treason (1947) and A Train of Powder (1955). Opposed to fascism, she also spoke out against Communism in the 1950s and is often seen as having grown increasingly reactionary. Yet, helpful to Emma Goldman in the 1920s, she was also generous to other artists and refugees later. Her awards included the Order of Saint Sava 1937, CBE 1949, Chevalier of French Légion d’honneur 1957, DBE 1959 and honorary degrees from New York and Edinburgh universities. She was a Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Rebecca West knew many famous people, but always felt an outsider. Her liaisons, some with well-known men, including Max (Lord) Beaverbrook, were generally unhappy. However, marriage in 1930 to a scholarly banker, Henry Maxwell Andrews (1894–1968), lasted until his death. Scottish connections continued through family contact and visits; she also participated in the 1962 Edinburgh Festival forum on censorship and attended the Scottish Writers’ Conference that year. She appeared in the film Reds (1981) two years before her death, aged 90. She described herself as ‘half-Scottish and half-Irish’ (letter to Harold Guinzberg, Nov. 1956, West 2000, p. 315). Family Memories, written during her last two decades and published posthumously, shows her lasting preoccupation with ‘the rich textures of my mother’s ancestry as manufactured by the Scottish tradition’ (West [1987] 1992, p. 17). Re-publication and the discovery of unpublished material by this important, wide-ranging writer have helped reinvigorate her reputation. ca

• Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale Univ. Library: Rebecca West papers; McFarlin Library, Special Collections Department, Univ. of Tulsa, Oklahoma: Rebecca West papers. West, R., Works as above, and (1982) The Young Rebecca: writings of Rebecca West 1911–17, sel. and ed. J. Marcus, (2000) Selected Letters of Rebecca West, B. K. Scott (ed.). See also www.rebeccawestsociety.com Anderson, C. (2000) ‘Feminine space, feminine sentence’ in C. Anderson and A. Christianson (eds) Scottish Women’s Fiction 1920s to 1960s; Clark, M. (2000) ‘Margaret Masson Hasluck’, in J. B. Allcock and A. Young, Black Lambs and Grey Falcons; Cowan, L. (2015) Rebecca West’s Subversive Use of Hybrid Genres: 1911–41; Devine, E. (ed.) (1984) The Annual Obituary 1983; DNB, 1981–5; Glendinning, V. (1987) Rebecca West (select Bibl.; source material); MacDiarmid, H. (1922) ‘Following Rebecca West in Edinburgh’, reprinted in B. K. Scott (ed.) (1990) The Gender of Modernism, (1926) ‘Newer Scottish fiction (1)’, reprinted in A. Riach (ed. and intro.) (1995) Contemporary Scottish Studies; ODNB (2004) (see Andrews, Cicily; Hasluck, Margaret); Rollyson, C. E. (1995) Rebecca West; Schweizer, B. (2002) Rebecca West: heroism, rebellion, and the female epic; Scott, B. K. (1995) Refiguring Modernism, vol. 1: The Women of 1928; WWW (1991) vol. VIII, 1981–1990; WoM (Margaret Hasluck). FARQUHAR, Barbara Henry, n. Smith,

born Peterculter, Aberdeenshire, c. 1815, died London 12 March 1875. Prizewinning author. Daughter of Lilias Smith, and Morison Smith, gardener. The eldest of ten children, Barbara Smith had minimal schooling and helped at home. In 1847, while living in Ayton, Berwickshire, she entered a competition open to working men for an essay on the temporal value of the Sabbath. There were over a thousand entries, and hers was deemed ineligible because of her sex. However, Lord Ashley, the future Lord Shaftesbury, showed the manuscript to Queen Victoria and Prince Albert, who publicly praised it. It was published, initially as a subscription issue, bound in scarlet and gold with the royal arms emblazoned on the front, a dedication to the Queen, and an autobiographical sketch of the author’s life. In four years over 50,000 copies were sold (eventually over 100,000) plus Welsh, German and Norwegian translations. Although comprehensively evangelical, there was a touch of radicalism in her observations on the possible political implications of ending Sunday observance. In a subsequent essay on the religious and domestic importance of female education, she hinted at the potential intellectual equality of the sexes and urged that all girls should learn ‘medical science’ at school. In 1850 she

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married James Williamson Farquhar. They ran a school in Cupar and later moved to London. LRM • [Farquhar, B. H.] (1848) The Pearl of Days: or, the advantages of the Sabbath to the working classes, by ‘A Labourer’s Daughter’, (1851) Female Education; its Importance, Design, and Nature Considered. Bell’s Weekly Messenger, 24 July 1848; Cooke, A. (2006) From Popular Enlightenment to Lifelong Learning: a history of adult education in Scotland 1707–2005, pp. 102–3; Dumfries and Galloway Standard, 22 Nov., 27 Dec. 1848; Staffordshire Advertiser, 26 Aug. 1848. FARQUHARSON, Marian Sarah, n. Ridley, FLS, FRMS, born West Meon, Hampshire, 2 July 1846, died Nice, France, 20 April 1912. Botanist and campaigner for women’s rights. Daughter of Frances Joucriet, and Rev. J. Nicholas Ridley. Marian Ridley spent her early life in England, but after her marriage in 1883 to fellow botanical enthusiast Robert Farquharson of Haughton, Aberdeenshire, she lived in Scotland, becoming more patriotically Scottish than the Scots. Her main research interest was in ferns, mosses and seaweeds, and in 1885 she was elected a fellow of the Royal Microscopical Society but discovered that as a woman she was not permitted to attend any of its meetings. She gave papers, generally in absentia, at women’s congresses in London (1899), Paris (1900) and other public meetings, on the impact of women’s exclusion from the facilities and intellectual discussions of learned societies, and initiated a movement for women’s admission to them. Broadening her campaigning, in 1900 she formed a Scottish branch of the Women’s International Progressive Union and in 1902 founded the Scottish Association for the Promotion of Women’s Public Work (SAPWPW). Suffering from poor health all her life, Marian Farquharson was a virtual invalid in her later years, but despite this she effectively was the SAPWPW. An attractive personality, she built up a network of influential contacts. Between 1900 and 1911 she also contributed over 140 letters to the Aberdeen newspapers. LRM

• Ridley, M. S. (1881) A Pocket Guide to British Ferns. Aberdeen Journal, 28 Mar. 1902, 13 May 1912 (obit.); Ayres, P. (2017) ‘The women’s champion: Mrs Farquharson of Haughton and women’s struggle to join scientific societies’, Women’s History 2, 7, pp. 13–20; Dundee Evening Telegraph, 9 Mar. 1901; eODNB; Pedersen, S. (2002) ‘Within their sphere? Women correspondents to Aberdeen daily newspapers 1900–1914’, Northern Scotland, 22, pp. 159–66; The Scotsman, 23 Aug. 1901; WWW.

FARQUHARSON, Marjorie Milne, born

Glasgow 11 Aug. 1953, died Edinburgh 13 May 2016. Political scientist, human rights worker, Quaker. Daughter of Nellie Milne, and Alexander Farquharson, chartered accountant. Marjorie Farquharson first went to Moscow as a student from St Andrews in 1975. She was a fluent Russian speaker and, having worked for Amnesty International in London, set up its Moscow base in 1991, the year the Soviet Union collapsed. She became the linchpin of Amnesty’s human rights campaigning there, helping expose the hidden crime of political abuse of psychiatry. She also met her lifelong Russian partner, Irina. Over the next 25 years, she worked on human rights in many contexts, including the UN at Geneva and the Council of Europe in Strasbourg, and reported on issues such as human trafficking, statelessness, sexual minorities, detention and torture. Her countries of expertise included all five central Asian states, Russia, Ukraine, Georgia and the Baltic states. She advised on the funding and evaluation of various projects, travelling extensively and alone to places with poor living conditions and at considerable personal risk. Her unassuming and modest demeanour coupled with her wide knowledge enabled people to trust her. Having returned to Scotland in 2001, Marjorie Farquharson ­operated as an independent human rights consultant. A member of the Religious Society of Friends, she also oversaw, as a Quaker registrar, the first religious same-sex marriage in Scotland. In her last years, despite the impact of multiple sclerosis, she campaigned for an independent Scotland in Europe on behalf of the SNP. RJH

• Farquharson, M. M. (2003) ‘Four ex-Soviet states and the death penalty’, Quarterly on Security and Co-operation in Europe, 2, (Oct. 2003) Rough Justice: the law and human rights in the Russian Federation, AI report, (2005) Sexual Minorities and the Republic of Uzbekistan, IRCSM report. The Guardian, 1 July 2016 (obit.). FENWICK, Margaret Taylor Naysmith, n. Mands, MBE, born Dundee 19 August 1919, died Dundee 8 Feb. 1992. Weaver, trade unionist. Daughter of Hope Stewart, domestic servant, and Alexander Mands, gasworks labourer. Margaret Mands attended Stobswell School, where she won a bursary but, at 14, she became an apprentice weaver at the SCWS Taybank Works. Her parents and brothers were active trade unionists, and she was conscious of her rights from the very beginning. Aged 15, she discovered that she

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was paid less than older women doing the same work; she demanded, and won, equal pay. She joined the Dundee & District Union of Jute & Flax and Kindred Textile Operatives, moving on to the Management Committee by about 1948. A fellow weaver remembers her as always standing up for their rights, even when they were not aware they had a grievance: ‘She liked to hear herself! But she was a good friend, and always ready for a laugh’. She married Andrew Small Fenwick, jute dresser, in 1938. Her husband worked in the same mill, though he had to go into the army during the war. They had four children. She continued to work as a weaver until January 1961 when she became assistant secretary of the union. The following year the union called its first all-out strike, and the women won a 1% pay rise. Margaret Fenwick continued campaigning for parity with men throughout her life. In 1971, she became the first woman General Secretary of a British trade union, one of the biggest in Dundee with around 5,000 members. A small but hefty, determined woman, with a perpetual cigarette, she did not take kindly to opposition but, unlike previous union leaders, was prepared to work with employers on issues such as recruitment and government protection for the industry. She served on various jute-related committees, and did much to improve health and safety as well as pay. In 1973, her hard work was acknowledged with an MBE. About five years later, with the jute industry in recession, she retired, but continued to work on industrial tribunals and to serve as a JP until the year before her death. imh • Dundee City Archives, Union minute books; Dundee Oral History Project Archive 040, Central Library, Dundee, Interview with Margaret Fenwick. Dundee Courier & Advertiser 10 Feb. 1992 (obit.); DWT; ODNB (2004); Tomlinson, J., Morelli, C. and Wright, V. (2011) The Decline of Jute: managing industrial change. Private information (fellow jute worker). FERGUSON, Christiana see CATRIONA NIC FHEARGHAIS (fl. 1745–6) FERGUSSON, Mary Isolen (Molly), OBE, born Stoke, Devonport, 28 April 1914, died London 30 Nov. 1997. Civil engineer. Daughter of Mildred Gladys Mercer, and John N. Fraser Fergusson, MB, maker of early radiography research equipment. At York College, Molly Fergusson was head girl and was encouraged in her interest in engineering. She graduated BSc Hons in civil engineering from

the University of Edinburgh in 1936 and, having returned to her roots, remained in Edinburgh all her working life. As an unpaid indentured trainee with the Scottish firm of civil engineers Blyth and Blyth in 1936, she showed exceptional promise and, after her first year, was paid 30 shillings a week (£1.50). She worked with the senior partner on many important infrastructure projects, including bridges in the Highlands and Islands. She made history by becoming the first female senior partner in a UK civil engineering firm, on 1 January 1948. Molly Fergusson worked with relentless energy on projects such as the Markinch paper mills and the River Leven water purification scheme, and expected the same dedication from her juniors. The first woman to be elevated to a fellowship of the ICE (1957), on retiring in 1978 she continued with consultancies, using the fees to endow bursaries for young engineers. She was active in the WES and the Edinburgh Soroptimists, was made an OBE in 1979, and was awarded an honorary DSc at Heriot-Watt University (1985) for her work in encouraging women to take up engineering careers. She never married, but took great interest in her nephews and was active in the scouting movement for 35 years. ncb • Heriot-Watt Univ. Citation for honorary degree of DSc, 1985; The Scotsman, 9 Jan. 1998 (obit.); University of Edinburgh Calendar, 1936–7. Personal communications from S. Macartney, Blyth and Blyth, Edinburgh. FERRIER, Susan Edmonstone,

born Edinburgh 7 Sept. 1782, died Edinburgh 5 Nov. 1854. Novelist. Daughter of Helen Coutts, and James Ferrier, Writer to the Signet and later Principal Clerk of Session. The youngest daughter among ten surviving children, Susan Ferrier was born in Edinburgh’s Old Town and grew up in the New Town in George Street. She was probably educated at James Stalker’s Academy (a co-educational infants’ school) and at home. Her mother died in 1797, followed by the early deaths overseas of three brothers, who were in the army. After her sister Jane Ferrier’s marriage in 1804, she kept house for her father. The Ferriers had literary connections and Susan met Henry Mackenzie, author of The Man of Feeling, and Sir Walter Scott, who became a friend; her autograph album contains signatures of Wordsworth, James Hogg and others. Her lawyer brother John Ferrier married the sister of John Wilson (writer ‘Christopher North’), Robert Burns

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addressed verse to her sister Jane, and John Leyden wrote sentimental poetry to her. She accompanied her father, legal agent to the 5th Duke of Argyll, on his business visits to Inveraray. There she encountered Highland landscapes and the Duke’s family, forming a friendship with his granddaughter Charlotte Clavering (1790–1869), niece of Charlotte Campbell (see Bury, Lady Charlotte). In 1809, they began planning a novel together. However, apart from one chapter, Susan Ferrier wrote Marriage alone, encouraged by Charlotte, to whom she wrote light-heartedly, imagining her work in print: ‘Enchanting sight! Already do I behold myself arrayed in an old mouldy covering, thumbed and creased, and filled with dog’s-ears’ (Doyle 1898, p. 76). Marriage was published by Blackwood (1818), anonymously, as Susan Ferrier wished – some characters reputedly had real-life models, such as *Anne Damer. It was attributed by many to Walter Scott; he publicly praised his ‘sister shadow’, the author of this ‘very lively work’ (Scott 1819, p. 330), perhaps innocent of her identity. Marriage contains conventional didacticism but also robust satire and richly comic characters. Reportedly admired by James Ferrier, who was amazed on learning of his daughter’s authorship, the novel was described by *Anne Grant as the ­‘production of a clever, caustic mind’ (Grant 1844, p. 57). Despite its success, Susan Ferrier received only £150. The Inheritance (1824) was largely written at Morningside, where the family spent summers. It was well received and, with a contract negotiated by her brother John Ferrier, earned £1,000. Much of her third novel, Destiny (1831), was probably written at Stirling Castle where, after her father’s death in January 1829, she stayed for a time with Jane, whose husband, General Samuel Graham, was Governor there. Dedicated to Walter Scott, who had negotiated a generous payment (£1,700), this often pungently satirical, now ­somewhat neglected, work was also enjoyed by Anne Grant. Susan Ferrier lived in increasing seclusion as her health, in particular her eyesight, declined. In 1830 she visited a London ‘oculist’ (Doyle 1898, p. 208). Her eyesight was failing so badly she often had to stay in darkened rooms, and writing was difficult: fragments remain of a projected novel, ‘Maplehurst Manor’. She became deeply religious, joining the Free Church after the 1843 Disruption and supporting charitable and radical causes, such as temperance, missions, and the emancipation of slaves. The novels appeared in editions bearing her name

for the first time in 1852. Admired by 19th-century critics, they have attracted fresh interest since the later 20th century. ca • BL: Susan Ferrier MSS (included in Bentley Papers), Add. 46614 ff.17–22, and Add. 71926, ff.193–4, f.195; NLS: Susan Ferrier Papers, Acc. 8585 (microfilm), letters etc. in other accessions (Accs. 7224, 8304, 10759, 11030). Ferrier, S. [1818] Marriage, 3 vols, (1997) H. Foltinek (ed.), intro. K. Kirkpatrick; [1824] The Inheritance, 3 vols, (1984) intro. J. Irvine; [1831] Destiny, 3 vols, ‘Recollections of Visits to Ashestiel and Abbotsford’, Temple Bar magazine, 40, Feb. 1874, pp. 329–35; ‘Maplehurst Manor’, see Yeo below. Cullinan, M. (1984) Susan Ferrier; Doyle, J. A. (ed.) (1898) Memoir and Correspondence of Susan Ferrier 1782–1854; ECSWW; Grant, A. (1844) Memoir and Correspondence of Mrs Grant of Laggan, vol. III; Grant, A. (1957) Susan Ferrier of Edinburgh; HSWW (Bibl.); McIntosh, A. (2013) ‘Susan Ferrier’, British and Irish Literature – Oxford Bibliographies Online; NWSLR; ODNB (2004); Parker, W. M. (1965) Susan Ferrier and John Galt; Scott, W. (1819) Tales of my Landlord: a legend of Montrose, 3rd series (4 vols) vol. IV; Yeo, E. (1982) Susan Ferrier 1782–1854, NLS Exhibition Catalogue, includes Ferrier’s fragments for ‘Maplehurst Manor’. FIFE, Isobel of, Countess of Buchan, c. 1285–c. 1314. Participant in Robert I’s inauguration. Daughter of Anna, possibly daughter of Sir Alan Durward, and Colban, Earl of Fife. The men of Isobel of Fife’s paternal family, who belonged to the long-established native aristocracy, claimed a hereditary right to inaugurate the kings of Scotland at their enthronement. Her own actions following Robert Bruce’s victory at Methven in 1306 demonstrate how medieval noblewomen might play decisive roles in the course of their lives. In 1306, Isobel’s nephew, heir to the earldom of Fife, was in English captivity; the family of her husband, John Comyn, Earl of Buchan, was reacting in shock to Bruce’s murder of their chief representative in the Greyfriars’ kirk in Dumfries. When Bruce, anxious to consolidate his kingship claim, arranged his enthronement at Scone, traditional site of Scottish royal inaugurations, Isobel abandoned her husband’s faction and, with some of his men and horses, rode to Scone. Several chroniclers, English and Scottish, relate that she performed the rituals traditionally associated with the male representatives of the Fife family. Her actions earned her the enmity of Edward I, now at open war with Robert I. Captured at the sanctuary of Tain in the summer of 1306, together with the king’s wife, *Elizabeth de Burgh, and daughter, *Marjory Bruce, Isobel was imprisoned at Berwick Castle in a specially constructed

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cage of wood and iron, hung out over the walls so ‘that all they who pass may see her, and know for what cause she is there’ (Palgrave 1837, p. 358; Luard 1890, iii, p. 324; Riley 1865, p. 367). Dubbed a ‘faithless conspirator’ against the English crown, she was not released from strict confinement at Berwick until 1310, when she was permitted to take up residence in the Carmelite house in the town. Edward II, however, continued to consider her a potentially dangerous figure in the pro-Bruce cause; she was ordered to leave the Carmelites and spent the rest of her life in the custody, if honourable, of an English kinsman of her Comyn husband. Isobel’s great niece Isabella of Fife (1320/29–1389), last of the line of the native earls of Fife, lived in England 1332–58. Widowed in 1358, she pursued her claim to Fife, supported by Robert Stewart, heir to the throne. She married his son Walter Stewart in 1360–1, but he died in 1362. When Robert Stewart became Robert II, she may have performed the same role at his inauguration as Isobel had for Robert I. Widowed after a third marriage, she confirmed her second husband’s brother, Robert Stewart, as heir to Fife in 1371. CJN • Boardman, S. (1996) The Early Stewart Kings; Luard, H. R. (ed.) (1890) Flores historiarum, 3 vols; Neville, C. J. (1993) ‘Widows of war . . .’, in S. S. Walker (ed.) Wife and Widow in Medieval England; ODNB (2004); Palgrave, F. (ed.) (1837) Documents and Records Illustrating the History of Scotland; Penman, M. (2004) David II 1329-71; Riley, H. T. (ed.) (1865) Willelmi Rishanger . . . Chronica et Annales; Skene, W. F. (ed.) (1871) Johannis de Fordun Gesta Annalia. FINDLATER, Mary Williamina, born Lochearnhead 28 March 1865, died St Fillans 22 Nov. 1963.

born Edinburgh 4 Nov. 1866, died Comrie 20 May 1946. Novelists and short story writers. Daughters of Sarah Borthwick (see Jane Borthwick), hymnwriter, and Eric Findlater, Free Church minister. Mary and Jane Findlater were brought up with an older sister at their father’s manse in Lochearnhead and educated by governesses. They were intelligent, quick-tongued girls with striking looks inherited from their father, who was rumoured (they were disturbed to learn in later years) to be the child of ‘a Spanish pirate’. They wrote from childhood. Mary said as an old woman, ‘I can’t remember when we began to write, we were always writing’ (Mackenzie 1964, p. 18). When their father died in 1886 the family moved to Prestonpans, living on a tiny income.

FINDLATER, Jane Helen,

Both sisters continued to write, and a collection of Mary’s poems, Songs and Sonnets, was ­published in 1895. Their breakthrough came with the publication of Jane’s first novel The Green Graves of Balgowrie (1896). It was well received and they became accepted in literary and intellectual circles. Concern for their mother’s health caused them to move to Devon, living in Paignton (1901–23). Admirers of their work included William Gladstone, Ellen Terry and Rudyard Kipling. On a tour of America they met notables including Andrew Carnegie, Frances Hodgson Burnett, William James and Henry James, who later became a close friend. Both Mary and Jane Findlater published novels individually and wrote short stories. Jane’s stories were of particular interest for their strong and sympathetic depiction of farm servants, tinkers and other country people. They collaborated on several books, of which the best known is Crossriggs (1908). Though the sisters had always had a very close relationship, this literary collaboration was particularly significant: ‘after the turn of the century, the two sisters increasingly relied on each other for support in a changing and violent world’ (HSWW, p. 303). During the 1920s their work was going out of fashion. In 1923 they moved to Rye in Sussex, and in 1940 to Comrie in Perthshire, where Jane died in 1946. Mary died in 1963, aged 98. During her last ten years, her ‘prodigious memory and . . . astonishing power of re-creating the past in conversational narrative’ (Mackenzie 1964, p. xii) gave her biographer an unmatched insight into the sisters’ lives. Their work, now out of print, represents the predicament of women writers of their time, exemplifying a ‘profound and paralysing internal debate concerning sexual and gender freedoms’ (HSWW, p. 291). marb • Findlater, M., Findlater J., Works as above and see HSWW (Bibl.). HSWW (Bibl.); Mackenzie, E. (1964) The Findlater Sisters: literature and friendship; ODNB (2004).

n. Macmillan, born Glasgow 30 July 1898, died East Kilbride 10 Nov. 1989. Socialist Sunday School teacher and Labour Party activist. Daughter of Kate Thompson, domestic servant, and John Macmillan, tailor. The eldest of five children, Jessie Macmillan had a happy childhood in a lively socialist household. She attended Napiershall Street School until she was 15, then worked in shops in Glasgow, eventually being sacked for recruiting women into the Shop Assistants’ Union. She took part in the

FINDLAY, Jessie,

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Glasgow rent strike in 1915 and on 31 January 1919 experienced the events of ‘Black Friday’ when soldiers patrolled the streets of Glasgow after clashes between police and workers in George Square. She attended the Socialist Sunday School (SSS) in Maryhill as a child and later became its most dedicated teacher. Fifty children heard speakers such as James Maxton and John Maclean and were taught not only the principles of socialism but also how to chair and conduct meetings and run the ­organisation. In 1922, she married Charles Findlay, a police constable, and devoted her energies to raising her four children. In 1951, she resumed political ­activities, working for the Co-operative Society, SCWG and the Labour Party in Glasgow. She acted as a sub-agent for Neil Carmichael when he won the significant Woodside by-election in 1962. When she moved to East Kilbride in 1967, her eldest daughter, Edith Findlay, carried on her work in the SSS, becoming its national secretary and editor of the Young Socialist. Jessie Findlay worked as her local party fund collector and in 1979 was awarded the Certificate of Merit for outstanding voluntary service to the Labour Party. Due to her lively personality, she was often interviewed for television documentaries on her early experiences as a Clydeside socialist. AC a • Gallacher Memorial Library, GCU Research Collections: SSS history; NLS: Jessie Findlay collection; People’s History Museum, Manchester: Merit Award acceptance speech by Jessie Findlay; SOHC: interview with Edith Findlay by Neil Rafeek, 1995. Labour Party conference report 1979; Mackie, L., ‘How Glasgow Preached Revolution’ (interview with Jessie Findlay), The Guardian, 20 August 1982; Sheffield Film Co-operative (1984) Red Skirts on Clydeside (Scottish Film Archive.) Private information: Janey Buchan. FINDLAY, Kathryn Elizabeth, Hon. FRIAS, born Finavon, Angus, 26 Jan. 1953, died 10 Jan. 2014. Architect. Daughter of Elizabeth Stewart Mackie, and James Findlay, sheep farmer. After Forfar Academy, Kathryn Findlay trained at London’s Architectural Association. Graduating in 1979, she travelled to Japan on a scholarship to work for avant-garde architect Arata Isozaki (RIBA gold medallist 1986). With her husband, Eisaku Ushida, she founded Ushida Findlay Architects in 1986, and practised and taught in Japan for 20 years, building a reputation for designing wildly futuristic homes apparently from another planet.

The first woman to hold an assistant professorship at Tokyo University, she was the first foreigner to be appointed professor there in the twentieth century. Key works in Japan included the Truss Wall House (1993), which performed elaborate feats with concrete, well in advance of computer modelling, and the Soft and Hairy House (1994): rising out of the ground with pinkish rough-rendered walls, as if extruded from the earth, it had a shaggy lawn of grass and wild flowers on top. Kathryn Findlay likened her design process to a worm eating through an apple: carving spaces out of a solid mass, rather than forming a building from the outside in. ‘The shape is an outcome of the spaces and movement inside’ (theguardian.com, 19 July 2009). Moving to Edinburgh with her two children in 2001, after her marriage ended, she built a striking pair of thatched poolhouses, while her design for a country house with a starfish-shaped design won planning permission but was never built. A commission for Qatar’s culture minister was demolished before completion, making way for a railway line; the collapse of other Qatari projects bankrupted her office in 2004. Later work included the circulation spaces for Anish Kapoor’s ArcelorMittal Orbit in London’s Olympic Park (2012) and remodelling the York Art Gallery, which opened posthumously. On the day of her death, her originality was recognised by the award of the Jane Drew Prize. OW • theguardian.com, 19 July 2009, article by S. Rose; The Architects’ Journal, 10 Jan. 2014 The Guardian, 15 Jan. 2014, The Scotsman, 16 Jan. 2014 (obits). www.architectsjournal. co.uk (see Jane Drew Prize). FINELLA,

fl. c. 995. Conspirator. Daughter of Cunchar, mormaer of Angus. According to contemporary Irish annals, Kenneth II (Cinaed mac Máel Coluim), King of Alba, was killed in 995 ‘through deceit’. A 12th-­ century Scottish ‘king-list chronicle’ elaborates on this, noting (relying perhaps upon information from a ‘feud-saga’) that the king was killed by his own men in Fettercairn through the treachery of a certain Finella (or Finuela), daughter of the mormaer of Angus, whose only son had been killed by Cinaed at Dunsinnan. No more than this is known. John of Fordoun’s fanciful medieval telling of the tale of Finella and the impossibly elaborate death-machine she contrived to assassinate the king, is dubious, although admittedly he was wellplaced to know local Fettercairn folklore. The story goes that she led the King to a secluded cottage. In 141

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the centre of the room stood a statue of a boy with hidden crossbows attached by strings all round. She promised the King ‘amazing sport’ if he were to touch the statue’s head. When he pulled it towards him, the crossbows were released and he died in a hail of arrows. jef • Skene, W. F. (ed.) (1871) Johannis de Fordun Chronica Gentis Scottorum, iv, pp. 32–3. Anderson, M. O. (1973) Kings and Kingship in Early Scotland; Duncan, A. A. M. (2002) The Kingship of the Scots, 842–1292.

died Edinburgh 6 March 1645. Shopkeeper and money-lender, Potterrow, Edinburgh. Executed for witchcraft. Agnes Finnie, widow of James Robertson, ran an apparently profitable business without evidence of male intervention. She sold fish, eggs, cakes, salt and other consumer goods. While she was central to her community, she also generated a great deal of friction. Many were displeased with the quality of her goods and her prices. But the main source of tension was her determination to collect on goods bought on credit and cash loans. Agnes Finnie also cursed in response to social slights, such as when her godchild was not given her name. For over 25 years she responded to her neighbours’ complaints with curses, threats and sometimes physical abuse. Her daughter, Margaret Robertson, seems to have acquired her mother’s style as she was twice charged with flyting (scolding). Agnes Finnie was arrested in June 1644. Officials searched her house for wax images, pictures, toads or other witchcraft implements, but found nothing incriminating. After being investigated before the Edinburgh Presbytery, she was placed in the Tolbooth. She complained to the Privy Council about mistreatment and languishing in prison. She was tried on 20 December 1644. Unable to get a confession, corroborating testimony from another witch or any real evidence of demonic involvement, the investigating authorities went to trial solely on the basis of misfortunes allegedly caused by her after curses and quarrels. Her words are exemplary of those attributed to other witchcraft suspects and women charged with slander or flyting. Some of the phrases included: ‘Thow sall nevir eat moir in this worald’, ‘I gar [order] the devill tak ane byt [bite] of the said Bessie’, ‘Weill, gif I be ane witche, ayther [either] ye or yours sall have better cause to call me soe’, ‘The devill ryd about the toun with yow and all yours’, and ‘the devill blaw yow blind’ (Selected

FINNIE, Agnes,

Justiciary Cases, pp.638–44). Her language was enough for the jury to convict. She was executed on Thursday, 6 March 1645 on the Castle Hill of Edinburgh. lm • NRS: JC40/9, Witchcraft Papers. RPC, 2nd Series, vol. 8, pp. 134–5; Smith, J. (ed.) Selected Justiciary Cases, vol. 3, pp. 627–75; Survey of Scottish Witchcraft, www.arts.ed.ac.uk/witches

born Glasgow 22 Dec. 1860, died Paisley 21 March 1944. First elected woman president (1913) of the EIS. Daughter of Jane McNaughton, and William Fish, chaplain to Sharp’s Institution in Perth. Educated at Sharp’s Institution, Elizabeth Fish became a pupil-teacher in Glasgow, came first in Scotland in the Queen’s Scholarship examination, and studied at the Glasgow Church of Scotland Training College. She taught for the Glasgow School Board (1881–95), at its PupilTeachers’ Institute (1895–1907), and in Higher Grade Schools (1907–20). She also ran evening classes for the cure of stammering and lectured in hygiene and physiology. Having graduated LLA from St Andrews University in 1885, she studied French and Italian (SA medal) and was president of the SMLA for two years. Her final post was as p ­ rincipal teacher of modern languages at Bellahouston Academy (1920–5). Elizabeth Fish held office in the Glasgow branch of the CTA, was president of the Glasgow Local Association of the EIS, was active in the annual Ladies’ Meeting of the EIS, and wrote for the EIS paper, The Educational News. In the June 1913 EIS presidential election, she polled 4,822 votes against three male candidates, whose combined votes totalled 3,068. She condemned the low pay of women teachers, but although she acknowledged the principle of equal pay, she cautioned against its demand, for fear of alienating the public. jm c d

FISH, Elizabeth Mary Jane,

• Glasgow Herald, 22 March 1944 (obit.); *ODNB (2004); SB; Scot. Educ. Jour., 27, 3 (1914). FISHER, Ray Galbraith, m. Ross, born

Glasgow 26 Nov. 1940, died North Shields 31 Aug. 2011. Folk singer. Daughter of Morag Macdonald, and John Fisher, police inspector. Ray Fisher’s father was a member of Glasgow Police Choir; her mother, from Vatersay, sang Gaelic songs. All seven children sang, although Ray, with brother Archie and sister Cilla, made most impact within the traditional music revival. A seminal influence was the great Traveller singer

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*Jeannie Robertson, with whom she enjoyed a lasting teacher–pupil relationship. During the late 1950s, Ray Fisher joined Archie and Bobby Campbell in the Wayfarers, and appeared on TV with Archie. She also sang alone, particularly after 1962 when she married Northumbrian piper Colin Ross, with whom she had three children. Though based thereafter on Tyneside, she established a reputation with her powerfully expressive voice as an authoritative singer of Scots traditional song, particularly ballads. She recorded with Archie and made three solo albums (1972, 1982, 1991) but said in an interview: ‘I don’t feel the need to put things on tape . . . I’m not interested in what posterity has to say about what contribution I’ve made to folk music’ (ODNB). Known for her warmth and wit, she encouraged younger singers through competition-judging and teaching and was a committed CND campaigner. In 2008, the English Folk Dance and Song Society awarded her its Gold Badge in recognition of ‘outstanding contribution to folk song’, and in 2010 she was inducted into the Scottish Traditional Music Hall of Fame. JG il • Fisher, R. (albums) The Bonny Birdy (1972), Willie’s Lady (1982), Traditional Songs of Scotland (1991). The Guardian, 1 Sept. 2011, The Herald, 5 Sept. 2011, The Scotsman, 4 Sept. 2011 (obits); Ladd Smith, S. D. (1988) ‘A contextual study of singing in the Fisher family’, PhD, Univ. of Edinburgh; Munro, A. (1996) The Democratic Muse: folk music revival in Scotland; eODNB.

born Kirkcaldy 15 Jan. 1803, died Kirkcaldy 19 Dec. 1811. Journal-writer, child author. Daughter of Isabella Rae, and James Fleming, accountant. Marjory Fleming was raised in Kirkcaldy. A visit to her aunt Marianne Keith’s family in Edinburgh, probably in 1809 after her sister’s birth, became a prolonged stay. She was tutored by her cousin, Isabella Keith, and between 1810 and 1811 wrote three journals, poems and letters, recording thoughts about Scottish history, lessons, friends, her behaviour, and so on – ‘I like to here [sic] my own sex praised but not the other’ (McLean 1999, p. 8). She died soon after returning home in July 1811, probably of meningitis. Her writings, preserved by her family, came to the attention of H. B. Farnie who published embellished extracts in 1858, coining the name ‘Pet Marjorie’. In 1863 John Brown began the fictitious story of her great friendship with Walter Scott. The ‘child genius’

FLEMING, Marjory,

f­ ascinated Victorians; Leslie Stephen wrote her entry for the DNB (misnamed Margaret), as its youngest subject. In 1946, Oriel Malet wrote a fictionalised biography of her and, in 1969, composer Richard Rodney Bennett set some of her poems to music in A Garland for Marjory Fleming. Her writings throw fascinating light on early nineteenth century middle-class childhood. ee • NLS: MSS 1096–1100. Fleming, M. (1934)The Journals, Letters & Verses of Marjory Fleming, A. Esdaile, ed. (facsimile), (1999) Marjory’s Book, B. McLean, ed. Gent, F. (1947) ‘Marjory Fleming and her biographers’, Scot. Hist. Rev. 26; Malet, O. [1946] (2000) Marjory Fleming ; ODNB (2004).

n. Stevens, born Dundee 15 May 1857, died Cambridge, MA, USA, 21 May 1911. Astronomer. Daughter of Mary Walker, and Robert Stevens, carver and gilder. Soon after her marriage to James Fleming in 1877, Williamina Fleming emigrated to America with her husband. He later abandoned her, leaving her to support herself and her child. In 1881, she was appointed by Harvard College Observatory Director E. C. Pickering to a humble post, copying and routine computing. The work expanded significantly with the founding in 1886 of the Henry Draper Memorial, a fund given by Draper’s widow for the examination of the spectra of stars which, in a new observational project, were photographed in their hundreds. E. C. Pickering employed women specifically for this work, and Williamina Fleming was assigned the task of devising an empirical system to classify the stars by their spectra. Her classification, labelling stars according to letters of the alphabet, became the basis of all future systems. In the first four years she catalogued tens of thousands of stars and discovered hundreds of unusual objects. She published some papers in her own name, but much of the catalogue work appeared in the official publications of the Harvard Observatory, for which she also did the proof-reading. Williamina Fleming’s efficient supervision of her team of women saw the work expand to become one of the most famous and successful ventures in the history of astronomy, providing one of the earliest opportunities for women in science. In 1899, she was elevated to a post of Curator of Astronomical Photographs, the first woman to hold a formal appointment at Harvard. She was elected an Honorary Member FLEMING, Williamina Paton,

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of the Royal Astronomical Society, a rare accolade in that then all-male institution. She was still in office at her death. mtb • Fleming, W. (1893) ‘A field for women’s work in astronomy’, Astronomy and Astrophysics, 12, pp. 638–89, (1907) ‘A photographic study of variable stars, forming a part of the H. Draper Memorial’. Cannon, A. J. (1911) ‘Mrs Fleming’, Scientific American, 102, p. 547 (obit.); DWT; Mack, P. E. (1990) ‘Strategies and compromises: women in astronomy at Harvard College Observatory, 1870–1920’, Jour. Hist. Astr. 21, pp. 67–75; Sobel, D. (2016) The Glass Universe: the hidden history of the women who took the measure of the stars; ‘Williamina Paton Stevens Fleming (1857–1911)’, Harvard University Library Open Collections Program: Women Working 1800–1930, at http://ocp.hul.harvard.edu/ww/fleming.html FLETCHER, Christian, born Kinneff, 1619/20, died Feb. 1691; DOUGLAS, Elizabeth, born before 1618, died Barras 1653, daughter of Jean Fraser, and John Douglas of Barras; ERSKINE, Lady Mary, Countess Marischal and Countess of Panmure, born 1599, died after 1661, daughter of Marie Stewart, and John Earl of Mar. Saving the Scottish regalia from Oliver Cromwell’s forces in 1651–2 required the courage of several women. Christian Fletcher married James Grainger, minister of her local parish of Kinneff, five miles from Dunnottar Castle, around 1642. They had three children. In June 1651, following Charles II’s Scottish coronation, it became necessary to hide the crown regalia from the English, and they were entrusted to George Keith, 7th Earl Marischal. Katherine Smith (fl. 1639–76), wife of David Drummond, minister of Moneydie, smuggled the regalia in sacks of wool through enemy forces into the Earl’s castle at Dunnottar, and to the care of the castle’s commander George Ogilvie of Barras and his wife Elizabeth Douglas. In September 1651, with the castle’s capture appearing imminent, Lady Mary Erskine, Dowager Countess Marischal, the Earl’s mother, Elizabeth Douglas and Christian Fletcher formulated a plan to hide the regalia and important papers. Anne Lindsay (fl. 1651–4), Elizabeth Douglas’s kinswoman and by 1654 wife of John Willocks, minister of Kemnay, carried out the papers, hidden in her belt, through the English encampment. In February and March 1652, the regalia were smuggled out by Christian Fletcher and her servant, although later accounts of their exact actions vary. Taken to Kinneff Kirk, the regalia were buried beneath the floor and remained there until 1660.

When Dunnottar fell in May 1652, Elizabeth Douglas refused to reveal the regalia’s location, despite the couple being imprisoned. She claimed they had been taken to France by Sir John Keith, the Countess Marischal’s son; the Countess spread a rumour to support this. When Sir John Keith was captured, he upheld the ruse. Elizabeth Douglas and her husband were released to return to Barras. She died shortly afterwards. Lady *Carolina Oliphant’s song ‘Dunnottar Castle’ commemorates her. With the 1660 Restoration, both the Countess and George Ogilvie claimed major responsibility for saving the regalia, with disputes lasting until 1702. Parliament awarded Christian Fletcher £111 sterling in 1661, but no money was paid. Widowed in May 1663, Christian Fletcher married James Sandilands, Lord Abercrombie, in September. Her daughter’s birth in February 1664 caused scandal, perhaps contributing to historical neglect of her heroic actions. George Ogilvie, Elizabeth Douglas, James Grainger and Anne Lindsay were commemorated in Kinneff Kirk and Dunnottar, but not Christian Fletcher. However, interpretative panels in the church now celebrate her courage. ee • Bell, W. (ed.) (1829) Papers Relative to the Regalia of Scotland; Barron, D. G. (1910) In Defence of the Regalia 1651–2; eODNB; Campbell, J. P. (2007) The Scottish Crown Jewels and the Minister’s Wife. Private information. FLETCHER, Eliza,‡ n. Dawson, born Oxton, Tadcaster 15 Jan. 1770, died Grasmere 5 Feb. 1858. Autobiographer, hostess and philanthropist. Daughter of Elizabeth Hill, and Miles Dawson, ­surveyor and Yorkshire small landowner. In 1791, against her father’s wishes, Eliza Dawson married Scottish advocate Archibald Fletcher, a Gaelic speaker and burgh reformer, and moved to Edinburgh, where she remained until her husband’s death in 1828. Her autobiography gives an outstanding account of early nineteenthcentury Edinburgh literary and reforming circles, tracing her own political and philanthropic commitments and chronicling a happy family life. She shared her husband’s political sympathies with the early principles of the French Revolution, though not with more radical revolutionary politics. She wrote of the ‘strong tide of Tory prejudice’ against reformers in Edinburgh in the 1790s, including the rumour that she possessed a miniature guillotine (Fletcher 1875, pp. 65–71). Her attractive

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personality and political interests allowed her to play a lively though not uncontested role in the circles surrounding the Edinburgh Review, founded in 1802. With *Elizabeth Hamilton and *Anne Grant of Laggan, she helped to provide the sociable and conversational contexts in which men such as Francis Jeffrey, Henry Brougham, Dugald Stewart and many others flourished. Her house became ‘for many years the centre of attraction to everything that is elegant or enlightened about town’ (Grant 1845, I, p. 239). Her autobiography also identifies the close connections between a network of literary women, including Hamilton, Grant, *Joanna Baillie, *Margaret Cullen and *Mary Brunton, and the English dissenters Anna Barbauld and Catherine Cappe. Their common interests included women’s education and philanthropic action. In April 1798, Eliza Fletcher established the Edinburgh New Town Female Friendly Society, claimed as the first female friendly society in Scotland. In November 1798 she was a founding member of the ladies’ committee of the newly established Edinburgh Magdalene Asylum; she also helped to found similar committees for the Edinburgh Lancastrian School, in 1812, and the Edinburgh Society for the Suppression of Beggars in 1813. Most of her later years were spent in the English Lake District, but she celebrated the passing of the Reform Act for Scotland in Edinburgh in 1832, and regularly visited Edinburgh friends. She had two sons and four daughters, one of whom, Mary, Lady Richardson, later edited her mother’s ­autobiography. JR • NLS: Acc. 3758, ‘Autobiography of Mrs Eliza Fletcher (1770–1858)’ and corr. [Fletcher, E.] (1875) Autobiography of Mrs Fletcher with Letters and Other Family Memorials, [Richardson, M. (ed.)]. Rendall, J. (2005) ‘“Women that would plague me with rational conversation”: aspiring women and Scottish Whigs, c. 1790–1830’, in S. Knott and B. Taylor (eds) Feminism and the Enlightenment, (2017) ’Gender, Philanthropy and Civic Identities in Edinburgh, 1795–1830’, in D. Simonton (ed.) Routledge Handbook of the History of Gender and Urban Experience. FLETCHER, Elizabeth (Betty) m. Wedderburn, born Dec. 1731, died (? Edinburgh) 18 Dec. 1758. Friend of Enlightenment literati. Daughter of Lady Elizabeth Kinloch, and Sir Andrew Fletcher of Saltoun, Lord Milton, Lord Justice Clerk and chief sub-minister in Scotland to the 3rd Duke of Argyll.

As a child, Betty Fletcher was socialised into the London elite while attending an expensive boarding school in Chelsea. From 1745 she lived in and around Edinburgh, growing up with the assemblies, concerts and tea parties that defined fashionable society. An intelligent woman, fond of reading, she was the friend of several leading figures of the Scottish Enlightenment, in particular the philosopher David Hume, the historian William Robertson, and the playwright John Home. Home asked Betty (with her cousin and another young woman) to comment, as an arbiter of taste, on a draft of his highly successful play Douglas, first performed in 1756. She played a mediatory role between the literati and her politically influential father (with whom she was close), and may even have introduced some of them to him. In February 1758 she married Capt. John Wedderburn of Gosford (later Sir John Halkett of Pitfirrane, 1720–93), in a marriage based on genuine affection. She died ten months later of puerperal fever. KG • EUL, Special Collections: La III 364, Elizabeth Halkett, ‘Memoir of the Fletchers of Saltoun’; NLS: Saltoun MSS. Carlyle, A. (1990; repr. 1910 edn.) The Autobiography of Dr Alexander Carlyle of Inveresk, 1722–1805, J. H. Burton (ed.), with new Introduction by R. B. Sher; Glover, K. (2011) Elite Women and Polite Society in Eighteenth-Century Scotland; ODNB (2004). FLUCKER, Barbara,‡

n. Johnston, born Newhaven 8 Feb. 1784, died Newhaven 18 Feb. 1869. Fishwife. Daughter of Catherine Flucker, and John Johnston, fisherman. Barbara Johnston married George Flucker in 1806, and had eight children, of whom three died in childhood and one son, James, drowned at sea. Her life illustrates both the hardship and the independence experienced by the fishwives of the fishing village of Newhaven-on-Forth, a close-knit community which in the 1840s was flourishing. The wives had their own income from the fish-sales and ran their households while the men were at the fishing. George Flucker owned his own boat, also possessing two houses, which he left in his will to his wife. Barbara Johnston Flucker’s kinswoman, Elizabeth Johnston (1823–1901), married in 1842 Daniel Hall, who by 1868 had three fishing boats, one named the Elizabeth. Distinctive for its intermarried families and independent style of life, Newhaven was much visited by urban Victorians intrigued by its traditions. The pioneering photo­ graphers D. O. Hill and Robert Adamson took a

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series of photographs in about 1845, which immortalised inhabitants of the village. Barbara Johnston Flucker and Elizabeth Johnston Hall were among the fishwives represented in their flamboyant traditional costume and engaged in the tasks of ‘shucking’ oysters or carrying heavy creels of fish on their backs to sell around the houses of Edinburgh. ls

of a money-lender, or wadwife, in their ancestry but they must have benefited from her enterprise. On her death she left moveable estate worth over £22,000 Scots, which despite a quarter-century of inflation was still considerably more than that left by William Fowler from his trade in wine and luxury cloths. mhbs

• McGowran, T. (1985) Newhaven-on-Forth, Port of Grace ; Reade, C. (1852) Christie Johnstone ; Stevenson, S. (1991) Hill and Adamson’s The Fishermen and Women of the Firth of Forth.

• NRS: Protocol Book of Alexander Guthrie, B22/1/20 folios 226–7. *ODNB (2004); Sanderson, M. H. B. (1987) Mary Stewart’s People (Bibl.).

FOCKART, Janet, born before 1550, died Edinburgh May 1596. Merchant and money-lender. Daughter of Elizabeth Ker, and John Fockart, Edinburgh burgess. Janet Fockart was a well-known figure in the trading community of Edinburgh. She and her first husband, merchant John Todd, had one son. Her second marriage to prosperous merchant William Fowler (d. 1572) by April 1561, produced three sons and three daughters, including William (1) merchant, William (2) poet in the court circle of James VI, and Susannah, who became the mother of the poet William Drummond of Hawthornden. Her third husband, merchant James Hathoway, committed suicide in 1579. They had no children. Janet Fockart was left to bring up her seven children and run the family business. In company with other merchants she made trading contracts, once with the Earl of Orkney for produce from his lands in return for a loan. She took bonds as security for payment, which she had done in her own name during William Fowler’s lifetime, and received income from letting lodgings. Her payment receipts, in her bold handwriting, survive in various family papers. She went to court personally in pursuit of debtors. From the mid-1580s, she turned to outright money-lending, taking pledges of jewellery and other valuables as security for loans. Her clients included nobility, lairds and the professions, to some of whom she lent as much as £1,000 Scots. She lent to the government, and on one occasion the Court of Exchequer met in her house. Family relations were not always harmonious. Her son-in-law John Drummond took her to court for failure to pay his wife’s tocher (dowry), and her merchant son, William, sued her for allowing the family’s property in Fowler’s (now Anchor) Close to fall into disrepair. When the Fowler family sought a birth-brieve in the mid-17th century they intentionally or erroneously cut her name out of their genealogy, substituting that of Janet Fisher, Englishwoman. They may not have liked the idea

born c. 1583, died after Oct. 1652. Educational benefactor, faction leader. Daughter of Janet Seton, and John, 8th Lord Forbes. Katherine Forbes was educated in Aberdeen and in the winter of 1603/4 married William Gordon of Rothiemay (d. 1630), whose death when resisting arrest by the Crichton sheriff of Banff exacerbated a feud between the Gordons and the Crichtons. Lady Rothiemay’s eldest son John died alongside the Marquis of Huntly’s heir in a suspicious fire when both were guests of the Crichtons in the tower house of Frendraught. Lady Rothiemay became heavily involved in the Gordons’ quest for revenge, the Crichtons in 1632 complaining of ‘certain oppressions, heirships, depredations and bloodsheds committed . . . by some broken Hieland men at the command of Katherine Forbes, Lady Rothiemay’. (RPCS, 2nd Series, IV, p. 241). In 1635, the Privy Council declared that she had a special hand ‘in all the disorders and troubles quhilks hes of lait fallin out in the north pairtes of this kingdome’ (RPCS, 2nd Series, V, p. 515). She was imprisoned in Edinburgh, and only released in February 1637. In June 1642, she mortified 1,000 pounds Scots to Aberdeen for a schoolmistress to teach girls and young women reading, writing, sewing and ‘any other art or science whereof they can be capable’ (Aberdeen Council Register, 52/1, p. 733). She took an active interest in the selection of the schoolmistress up until 1651, and characteristically sought the removal of any she thought incompetent. SGM

FORBES, Katherine, Lady Rothiemay,

• ACA: Council Register of the Burgh of Aberdeen, vols 52/1, 53/1; Register of the Privy Council of Scotland [RPCS], 2nd Series, vols III–V. W. Geddes (ed.) (1892, 1894) Musa Latina Aberdonensis; Spalding, J. (1828–9) The History of the Troubles and Memorable Transactions in Scotland and England from M.DC. XXIV to M.DC.XLI; A. and H. Taylor (eds) (1937) The House of Forbes.

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FORRESTER FORBES-SEMPILL, Elizabeth, later Sir Ewan Forbes, 11th Baronet of Craigievar, born 6 Sept. 1912, died

12 Sept. 1991. Medical practitioner and farmer. Daughter of Gwendolen Emily Mary Prodgers, and John, 18th Lord Sempill and 9th Baronet of Craigievar. Legally female until aged 40, Elizabeth ForbesSempill studied medicine at Aberdeen before working for ten years as a Donside GP. In 1952 she convinced the local Sheriff of the need to issue an order correcting her birth certificate to show her sex as male, arguing that a mistake had been made at the time of registration. A notice in the Aberdeen Press & Journal announced that henceforth Elizabeth was to be recognised as male and known as Ewan. It was said that his patients gave him universal support. Two months later he married his housekeeper, Isabella Mitchell. His legal sex and marriage were unchallenged until his brother William, Lord Sempill and baronet of Craigievar, died in 1965. William’s daughter could not inherit the Craigievar title and lands, as she was not an heir male. Ewan Forbes-Sempill’s right as nearest heir male was challenged by a more distant relative, who argued that the 1952 court order was incompetent and that he was female, that there had been no mistake at the registration, and that therefore any later changes were irrelevant in law. However, the judge concluded that Ewan Forbes was ‘a true hermaphrodite’ and so the sex which dominates is to be preferred: on the medical evidence, he was deemed male and his marriage and inheritance were secure. BD e

• Forbes, E. (1984) The Aul’ Days. Aberdeen Press and Journal, 12 Sept. 1952; Campbell, A. (1998) ‘Successful sex in succession’, Juridical Review, pp. 257–79, 325–47.

n. Jack, baptised (Betty) Glasgow 24 Oct. 1784, died Euroa, Victoria, Australia, 5 August 1859. Pioneer pastoralist and sheep classer. Daughter of Jean Mackinnon, and Alexander Jack, teacher. Eliza Jack married John Forlong, a Glasgow merchant, on 26 November 1804. With a consumptive family, a warmer climate seemed imperative so Eliza Forlong and her sons moved to Hamburg to study the Saxon wool industry. Between 1828 and 1830, she walked through Saxony, personally selecting sheep which she drove to Hamburg for shipment. The Forlongs then emigrated to Kenilworth, Van Diemen’s Land. Never content with their grant,

FORLONG[E], Eliza,

they conducted an epistolary war with colonial officials, returning to Britain in 1834 with younger son Andrew to approach English officials. John died, and Eliza returned to Van Diemen’s Land to find her elder son William moving to the newly settled Port Phillip District in Victoria. Kenilworth and their Saxon flock were sold. She squatted with William’s family on various sheep runs, finally settling at Seven Creeks Station, Euroa. She managed both station and household during William’s frequent absences. Although her pioneering and managerial skills were outstanding, it was her ability to select sheep that was unique. The Winton stud, founded on her flock, is Australia’s superfine wool parent stud. Today every fine wool sheep in Australia has a genetic trace to Eliza Forlong’s Saxon merinos. Memorials include one in the shape of a wool bale at her burial place, a sundial at Kenilworth, the Wool Foundation Eliza Forlonge Medal, a mural by Tom Thompson in Sydney, and a statue in Campbell Town, Tasmania. msr • Archives Office of Tasmania: Forlong file; Euroa (Victoria) Historical Society files. ADB; Argus, Melbourne, 11 August 1859; Clune, F. (1965) Search for the Golden Fleece; Massy, C. (1990) The Australian Merino; Ramsay, M. S. (2004) ‘Eliza Forlong and the Saxon merino industry’, Tas. Hist. Res. Ass. Papers, vol. 51 no. 3., Sept., pp. 121–35; Wilde, S. (1994) Eliza Forlonge, her life, her family, her vision. Private information: Margaret Higgins, Sydney (descendant). FORRESTER, Isobel Margaret Stewart, n. McColl, born Glenlyon, Perthshire, 30 June 1895, died Edinburgh 30 August 1976. Pioneer of ecumenism. Daughter of Jeannie Baillie, and John McColl, Free Church of Scotland minister. Isobel McColl was the older of two children and lived in a Highland manse until 1904, when the family moved to Edinburgh. She was educated at home and later at St George’s School, from where she won a scholarship to study English at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford. From 1917 she taught at St George’s and then at Edinburgh Academy. Her brother’s death at the Front led to a lifelong hatred of war. In 1920, she became Education Secretary for the UFC Girls Auxiliary – a national church organisation influenced by wider movements for social and religious change which became an important forum for young women aged 15–30. In 1922, she married Rev. William Forrester; they had five children. In 1935, he was appointed Professor of practical theology and Christian ethics at the University of St Andrews where, for 25 years, she offered hospitality to people from all over the

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world (including Germans and Malawians fleeing persecution), led retreats and student missions, and was a leading member of the St Andrews Women’s Debating Society. Her commitment to a progressive and global Christianity also found expression in her presidency of the Church of Scotland Women’s Foreign Mission. She was a passionate supporter of women’s ordination. Isobel Forrester instigated the inter-church ‘Dollarbeg Group’ in 1946 to participate in a WCC study on the life and work of women in the church. It met in conference for several years, tackling all the major religious, social and political issues of the day. For the next 30 years she played a key role in the development of ecumenical dialogue and organisation, including chairing the Scottish Churches Ecumenical Association. At her death, she was recalled for ‘her intellectual vigour, edged with wit and made lustrous by poetical feeling . . . she was always probing, always questing’ (Craig 1976). lo • Blackie, N. (ed.) (2005) A Time for Trumpets: Scottish church movers and shakers in the twentieth century; Craig, Rev. A., Funeral address, 4 Sept. 1976; *ODNB (2004); Small, M. (n.d.) Growing Together: the ecumenical movement in Scotland 1924–64. Private information and family papers. FORREST-THOMSON, Veronica Elizabeth Marian,

m. Culler, born Penang 28 Nov. 1947, died Birmingham 26 April 1975. Poet and critic. Daughter of Jean and John Forrest Thomson, rubber planters. Veronica Forrest Thomson (she adopted the hyphen later) was brought to Scotland with her elder brother in 1948. Her father returned to Malaya but she was raised in Glasgow, the home of her mother’s parents. She attended Jordanhill College School, Glasgow, and St Bride’s School, Helensburgh, and graduated BA with first-class honours in English at the University of Liverpool in 1967. She studied for a PhD at Girton College, Cambridge, 1968–71, and held academic posts at the universities of Leicester (1972–4) and Birmingham (1974–5). She married writer and academic Jonathan Culler in 1971; they divorced in 1974. Alongside her academic career ran ‘a short and incomplete but deeply shaped poetic development’ (Prynne memoir). She published her first poetry collection, Identi-Kits, in 1967 (under the name Veronica Forrest), but the important collection On the Periphery (1976) and her major critical work

Poetic Artifice: a theory of twentieth-century poetry (1978) were posthumous publications. The appearance of her Collected Poems and Translations in 1990 testified to a growing recognition of ‘the extraordinary nature of her work’ (Mark 2001, p. 1). Edwin Morgan’s ten-poem sequence in tribute to her is prefaced by an appreciation describing the ‘raw, moving, almost ballad strain’ in her poetry. ‘She was a spiky, difficult character of great intelligence and wit, engaging, vulnerable and lonely’ (Morgan 1990, p. 373). Her academic supervisor writes of her personal impact: ‘She wore outfits of bright green or uncompromising purple and hurled arguments about like brickbats . . . She wore perfume which would give the most hardened logician the staggers’ (Prynne). In spite of her untimely death, both her poetry and her critical work are seen as extremely important and influential. marb • Forrest-Thomson, V., Works as above. Girton College Cambridge: Veronica Forrest-Thomson Archive. Farmer, G. (2017) Veronica Forrest-Thomson: poet on the periphery; Mark, A. (2001) Veronica Forrest-Thomson and Language Poetry; Morgan, E. (1990) ‘Unfinished poems: a sequence for Veronica Forrest-Thomson’, Collected Poems, pp. 373–80 (includes a short prose appreciation), first published in The New Divan, 1977; Prynne, J. H. (1976, 2002) ‘Veronica Forrest-Thomson: a personal memoir’: www. jacketmagazine.com/20/pryn-vft.html FORRESTER-PATON, Catherine, born Alloa 1 June 1855, died Grantown-on-Spey 8 August 1914. Temperance campaigner and philanthropist. Daughter of Mary Paton, and Alexander Forrester, merchant and woollen manufacturer. Catherine Forrester-Paton’s parents combined their surnames, possibly because of Alexander Forrester’s role in John Paton & Son, founded by Mary Paton’s father. Educated at Alloa Academy and Grange House school, Edinburgh, at 15, Catherine Forrester-Paton returned home to care for her parents. In 1883, she inherited their home, Marshill House, and a considerable fortune. Prevented by uncertain health from becoming an overseas missionary, she threw her energies into temperance, nursing and missionary training. The Townhead branch of the BWTA was established after a visit by US temperance campaigner ‘Mother Stewart’. Catherine ForresterPaton became Secretary for life, later assisted by her housekeeper and companion, Agnes Boe. Activities went beyond temperance and prayer meetings to

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include cookery classes, laundry demonstrations and lectures on nursing. Tea tents at agricultural fairs and Saturday evenings for young people offered alternatives to the public house. President of the local YWCA, founded in 1880, she ran a Sunday afternoon class for young women in her home, and funded the Women’s Missionary Society and other ­associations. She was BWTA Scottish National President in 1906. BWTA meetings raised money from 1886 to fund a nurse for the needy, a model for a district nursing service. In 1899, Catherine Forrester-Paton built and equipped the County Accidents Hospital. She founded possibly the first non-denominational training home for missionary nurses at Westercraigs, Glasgow (succeeded by the Burnbank Lady Missionaries’ Training Home) in 1890. Her home became a holiday home for missionaries. Her Townhead Institute in Alloa, on the former site of a tavern, included a temperance tearoom. si • Livingstone, S. (1994) Bonnie Fechters; Lusk, I. M. (1997) Catherine Forrester-Paton of Marshill House, Alloa, 1855–1914 (Bibl.); ODNB (2004) (Paton, Catherine Forrester).

n. Mackenzie, born London 6 Nov. 1926, died London 10 Oct. 1998. Journalist and pioneering lesbian rights campaigner. Daughter of Margaret Alexander, and Major Kenneth Pirie Mackenzie, RAMC. After an early childhood spent in India, Jackie Mackenzie studied at St Leonards School in St Andrews. She joined the Edinburgh-based Wilson-Barrett Repertory Company as an actor. In the 1950s, she moved into film and television, winning the 1956 Prix Italia for her television report on the wedding of Prince Rainier and Princess Grace of Monaco. In 1958 she married Peter Forster; the marriage was dissolved in 1962. Although her working life took her south of the border to London and Brighton, she resolutely defined herself as a Scot. In the 1960s, same-sex attraction was still widely regarded as at best a dire psychological aberration. In 1969, at the dawn of gay liberation, Jackie Forster made a public proclamation of her lesbian identity. ‘You are looking’, she told a shocked crowd at Hyde Park’s Speakers’ Corner, ‘at a roaring dyke.’ (Times, 1998). From that point she became one of the most active and high-profile campaigners for lesbian and gay rights and feminist issues. In 1972, she co-founded the influential Sappho magazine, along with the social organisation of the same name. She co-scripted

the 60-minute television programme about London CHE groups, Speak for Yourself, which was shown by LWT on 21 July 1974 as part of Britain’s first ‘access television’ series. She played an active part in the campaign for the 1975 Sex Discrimination Act, was a member of the GLC Women’s Committee, a director of the London Women’s Centre, and a member of the board of the Lesbian Archive and Information Centre. In 1981, she wrote Rocking the Cradle: Lesbian Mothers, a Challenge in Family Living, with Gillian Hanscombe. Until her death, Jackie Forster worked constantly and with considerable wit and style, for social justice and equality for lesbians, gay men, and humankind as a whole. esg • Lesbian Archive and Information Centre, Glasgow Women’s Library: The Jackie Forster Collection. Films listed: www.sbu.ac.uk/stafflag/people.html Hanscombe, G. E. and Forster, J., Work as above. Brighton Ourstory Project, Issue 5, Winter 1998 (obit.); The Independent, 31 Oct. 1998 (obit.); Jennings, R. (2007) Tomboys and Bachelor Girls: a lesbian history of postwar Britain, ­1945–1971; ODNB (2004); The Times, 28 Oct. 1998 (obit.).

FORSTER, Jacqueline Moir (Jackie),

n. Toynbee, born Wimbledon, Surrey 4 Dec. 1858, died Letterawe, Argyll, 5 Oct. 1946. Microbiologist. Daughter of Harriet Holmes, and Joseph Toynbee, aurist FRCS. Educated privately in Germany, then at Bedford College, London, Grace Toynbee married Percy Faraday Frankland (1858–1946) in 1882 and moved with him to Dundee when he took up the Chair of Chemistry in 1888. The Franklands, who had one son, collaborated in their research, Grace Frankland taking equal recognition for work done and publishing jointly with her husband in Philosophical Transactions and in Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. She also wrote articles on bacteriological subjects in Longman’s Magazine and Nature. In 1891, the Franklands produced the concept that the organisms characteristic of sewage must be identified to provide evidence for potentially dangerous pollution. They observed and described in detail the process of nitrification carried out by microorganisms which did not require organic carbon for their growth, but the couple apparently failed to appreciate the extreme importance of their findings. In 1894, they moved from Dundee to the University of Birmingham, and published a biography of Louis Pasteur. They retired to Loch Awe, Argyllshire, in 1919, where Grace Frankland lived thereafter. Her individual contribution was ­recognised when FRANKLAND, Grace Coleridge,

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she was one of the first women to be elected to a Fellowship of the Linnaean Society. She had also represented bacteriology at the Women’s International Congress in London in 1899. ls

portrayal of Aboriginal peoples in the accounts and the alternative narratives handed down among the Badtjala about Eliza Fraser. fj

• Frankland, P. and Frankland, Mrs G. C. (1894) Microorganisms in Water, their Significance, Identification and Removal, (1898) Life of Pasteur ; Frankland, Mrs G. C. (1903) Bacteria in Daily Life. ODNB (2004); SB. FRASER, Eliza Anne, n. Slack, m1 Fraser, m2 Greene,

born possibly Stromness, Orkney, c. 1798, died probably Melbourne, Australia, 1858. Castaway. Eliza Fraser’s early life is obscure. She may have been born in Orkney and certainly spent time there. In 1835, she and her husband, Captain James Fraser, left their three children in Stromness in the care of the local minister, and sailed to Sydney on the Stirling Castle. Shipwrecked in May 1836 off eastern Australia, the Frasers with other crew members survived until the end of June, when they reached Great Sandy Island – later renamed Fraser Island. Some accounts suggest that she gave birth to a child who died while they were adrift. Exhausted, hungry and ill, the party encountered the native people, the Badtjala. The survivors later claimed to have been captured, stripped and forced to work, alleging that the Captain was murdered and the first mate died of burns inflicted by their captors. After their rescue in August, Eliza Fraser, now widowed, became a celebrity, gaining sympathy and financial help from a subscription fund. She remarried in 1837 and returned to Britain with her new husband, Captain Alexander J. Greene. Initially they kept the marriage secret, while she continued to plead destitution. The family later returned to the Antipodes. Soon after their rescue, Eliza Fraser and the second mate had both given official reports of their experiences (NSW records). Her experiences were retold repeatedly in newspapers and books, and it became hard to establish what actually happened on the island. Later consideration of the accounts suggests that colonial attitudes, as well as misunderstandings between the castaways and the Aborigines, may lie behind stories of cruel treatment. Eliza Fraser also probably exaggerated her claims in order to attract attention and financial aid. The story has remained part of Australian popular culture, inspiring paintings (Sidney Nolan), films, a novel (Patrick White) and poetry. Recent academic attention has focused on the

• NSW State Records: Colonial Secretary’s Correspondence AONSW SZ976, COD 183. ADB; Alexander, M. (1971) Mrs Fraser on the Fatal Shore; Behrendt, L. (2000) ‘The Eliza Fraser captivity narrative’, in Research School of Soc. Sci. Ann. Rept., Australian National Univ.; McNiven, I., Russell, L. and Schaffer, K. (1998) Constructions of Colonialism; Wright, J. (2002) ‘Desert island risks’ in Scottish Memories, Nov. FRASER, Helen Miller [the ‘Chieftainess’], m. Moyes, born Leeds 14 Sept. 1881, died Sydney,

Australia, 2 December 1979. Suffrage organiser. Daughter of Christiana Sutherland, and James Fraser, tailor’s cutter and clothing manufacturer. The third of ten children, Helen Fraser moved from Yorkshire with her Caithness-born parents to Glasgow, where her father established a wholesale clothing firm, Fraser Ross & Co, and became a city councillor. Educated at Queen’s Park Higher Grade School, Langside, her life consisted of ‘balls and dances, amateur theatricals, and charitable works’ (AGC, p. 73). However, in 1904 her father resigned from the council and as managing director of his company, which in 1906 went into liquidation; he died in 1908. With this downturn in family circumstances, she opened a studio, specialising in illustration work and embroidery. After hearing *Teresa Billington-Greig speak in autumn 1906, she became totally committed to women’s suffrage. Her family supported her work – her younger sister, actor Annie Fraser (b. 1837) was one of the first two Scottish women imprisoned for the cause in Holloway in 1907 with fellow actor *Maggie Moffat; Annie Fraser married Ronald Syme in Glasgow on 20 June 1914. Soon after joining the WSPU in 1906, Helen Fraser became an organiser. Throughout 1907, she spoke at meetings all over Scotland, establishing new branches, and leading an intensive campaign among holidaymakers in Dunoon, Rothesay and Gourock. A Scottish Council of the WSPU was established with Teresa Billington-Greig as honorary secretary and Helen Fraser as Scottish organiser. In January 1908, the Scottish WSPU headquarters, for which she was largely responsible, opened in Glasgow. However, she resigned from the WSPU later that year when Mrs Pankhurst came to Scotland and told her of the proposed stone-throwing campaign. She said ‘I was horrified . . . you don’t use violence, you use reason 150

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to get the vote . . .’ (Harrison tape 1975). She was welcomed into the NUWSS, although the GWSAWS objected to her as organising secretary for Scotland, as she had previously been persuading their members into the WSPU. Her resignation effectively ended the existence of a separate Scottish WSPU, but there was no mass defection to the NUWSS. She continued her speaking tours in a horse-drawn caravan, loaned to her by *Louisa Lumsden, and later worked as an organiser in England, where she became known as the ‘Chieftainess’. She remained an NUWSS executive committee member for 14 years. During the First World War, Helen Fraser worked for the government on the National War Savings Committee and, at the suggestion of Mrs Fawcett, undertook two lengthy speaking tours, on Britain’s war effort, in the USA, resulting in her book Women and War Work (1918). After the war, she joined the campaign to elect women as Members of Parliament, and was the first woman to be adopted as an official candidate in Scotland, standing unsuccessfully as a National Liberal at Glasgow Govan in 1922 and Hamilton in 1923. She resigned from the Liberal Party in 1925, as they would not take up the task of ‘liberating industry and fighting the tyrannies of combinations and unions’, to her the ‘­essential work of Liberalism’ (Glasgow Herald, 28 Feb. 1925). Later that year, she joined the Unionist Party, finding herself ‘increasingly in general agreement with the Unionist programme’ (Glasgow Herald, 5 May 1925). She emigrated in 1938 to Sydney, Australia, where her brother James was living, and in 1939 married James Moyes, a divorced Scottish school teacher who had emigrated some years before. Her publications included her autobiography A Woman in a Man’s World (1971), and Clothed with Spirit (n.d.). kbb • NRS: BT2/4194; New South Wales, Births, Deaths and Marriages: marriage certificate 1939/016620; The Women’s Library, London: Harrison tapes collection. Interview with Helen Fraser Moyes, 19 August 1975 by Brian Harrison (transcribed by Leah Leneman). Fraser, H., Works as above, and Moyes, H. (1971) A Woman in a Man’s World. AGC; Glasgow Herald, 28 Feb. and 5 May 1925; HHGW; ODNB (2004); SS; Weiss, E. F. (2008) Fruits of Victory: the Women’s Land Army of America in the Great War ; WSM. FRASER, Janet, n. Munro, m1 Kemp, m2 Fraser, born Glasgow 31 Jan. 1883, died Wellington,

New Zealand, 7 March 1945. Community leader, political activist. Daughter of Mary McLean, housekeeper, and William Munro, iron foundry warehouseman. Growing up in Glasgow, Janet Munro was influenced by the socialist writings of Robert Blatchford, and taught orphaned children. With her husband Frederick Kemp and five-year-old son Harold, she emigrated in 1909 to Auckland, New Zealand. After meeting fellow-Scot and socialist, Peter Fraser, her marriage ended and she worked alongside him in Wellington during the flu epidemic of 1918. They married in 1919 after her divorce. Janet Fraser supported the recently formed Labour Party and was a founder member of its Wellington women’s branch in 1920, joining the Wellington Hospital Board in 1925. Becoming one of the first woman JPs in 1926 was the first of many official appointments. A lifelong activist, especially on issues affecting women, children, health and social justice, she was secretary, chair, patron or member of a large number of organisations. With her husband, who became Prime Minister in 1940, Janet Fraser travelled on official delegations, revisiting Scotland in 1935. During the war, she headed the official women’s war effort, escorted Eleanor Roosevelt on her 1943 visit, and was instrumental in bringing many Polish refugee children to New Zealand. Significantly, she had an office next to her husband in parliament, acting as political adviser, researcher, gatekeeper and personal support system. They were an effective team. hs • Bassett, M. and King, M. (2000) Tomorrow Comes the Song: a life of Peter Fraser ; Stace, H. (1998) ‘Making policy as well as tea’, in M. Clark (ed.) Peter Fraser: master politician; Stace, H., ‘Fraser, Janet 1883–1945’, in DNZB. www.dnzb.govt.nz

m1 Ryder, m2 Pollock, born c. 1801, died Dalkeith 1 July 1875. Actor, singer and theatre manager. Local belief has it that Jessie Fraser was the daughter of the owner of the Theatre Royal in Marischal Street, Aberdeen, but parish records contain neither date nor place of her birth. She may have arrived in the city only when her father bought the theatre in 1812. There is little doubt, however, of her great popularity in the city. While still in her teens, she had what we would describe today as ‘iconic’ status among the young men of Aberdeen and after every performance received a deluge of flowers, letters and verses. One

FRASER, Jessie,

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poetic tribute included the lines: ‘Her form it is divinely fair/Her eyes sharp as a razor/They’ve cut into my inmost heart/And there reigns sweet Miss Fraser’. In 1818, Jessie Fraser married the Welsh actormanager, Corbet Ryder (1786–1839). Together they formed the company that established the Scottish tradition of touring theatre that continues to this day. Operating from their base in Aberdeen, the Ryder Company barnstormed through northern Scotland, playing annual seasons in Perth, Dundee, Montrose, Arbroath and Inverness. After Corbet Ryder’s death, Jessie managed the company with her stepson, Tom. In 1842 she married John Pollock (1813–53) and managed her own company in Her Majesty’s Opera House, Aberdeen, until 1853. Jessie Fraser’s acting career is notable for both its longevity and its range, best illustrated by her work in stage adaptations of novels by Sir Walter Scott. In her youth she played a succession of Scott heroines including Diana Vernon in Rob Roy, Lucy Bertram in Guy Mannering, Amy Robsart in Kenilworth. She appeared later in the same plays in other roles: Helen MacGregor, Meg Merrilees and Queen Elizabeth of England. She also excelled in the classics; her favourite role was Lady Macbeth, which she first played, opposite the great English actor William Charles Macready, when she was barely 20 years old. dc • Aberdeen Free Press, 7 July 1875 (obit.); Angus, J. K. (1878) A Scotch Playhouse: being the historical records of the Old Theatre Royal, Marischal Street, Aberdeen; Campbell, D. (1996) Playing for Scotland. FRASER, Kate, CBE, born Paisley 10 August 1877, died Paisley 20 March 1957. Physician, mental health pioneer. Daughter of Margaret Coats, of the firm of thread and textiles manufacturers, and Donald Fraser, MD. Kate Fraser was the fourth daughter in the family. Her father was a GP, examiner in clinical practice for the University of Glasgow, and campaigner against tuberculosis. Her physical exuberance and irascibility, like her father’s, earned her the nickname of ‘stormy petrel’ (Mayes 1995). After Paisley Grammar School, her pleas to study medicine were ignored, and her father enrolled her at Swanley Horticultural College. Determined to become a doctor, she rebelled. Finally giving way, her father thereafter supported her financially. Registering at the arts faculty of Queen Margaret College in 1893, she joined the pioneers of university education for women in Scotland,

switched to the Faculty of Science, and graduated BSc with ­distinction in Physiology in 1900, then MBChB in 1903. Kate Fraser’s early work was with the poor of Glasgow. A resident’s post in Crichton Royal Lunatic Asylum exposed her to the challenge of work in mental health. She founded the Paisley Mental Welfare Association in 1907 (the model for the SAMH, 1920), becoming its president. In 1908, she was the first woman School Medical Officer in Govan Parish. Drawing on her postgraduate study in Vienna and Paris, she pioneered Binet-Simon intelligence tests in Britain to help categorise children. Her MD thesis, on syphilis-related mental deficiency in schoolchildren (Glasgow 1913), was highly commended. Once women could legally become Deputy Commissioners on the General Board of Control for Scotland (after the Mental Deficiency Act, 1913), Kate Fraser applied, becoming the first woman Deputy in April 1914. In 1935, she became a full Commissioner, the first woman to sit on the Board. Aged 68, she was awarded the CBE for her contribution to mental welfare. After retiring in 1947, she remained active in mental health issues, serving on hospital boards, holding office in the SAMH and the Scottish Division of the RMPA. Alongside her international professional reputation, she maintained close relationships with her family and home town. Determined and independent, Kate Fraser was not a domesticated woman, remaining unmarried and being looked after by a long-serving housekeeper until her death. rd • Mayes, M. (1995) The Stormy Petrel; Medical Directory (1947); SB; The Times, 21 March 1957 (obit.); The University of Glasgow Story, www.universitystory.gla.ac.uk/biography FRASER, Marion Anne, (Lady Marion Fraser), LT, n. Forbes, born Glasgow 17 Oct. 1932, died Edinburgh

25 Dec. 2016. Musician, teacher, active in public life. Daughter of Elizabeth Taylor Watt, teacher, and Robert Forbes, electrical engineer. Marion Forbes attended Hutcheson’s Grammar School, Glasgow, and studied piano at RSAMDA. Reading music at the University of Glasgow, she became president of the university’s Queen Margaret Women’s Union, then visited the USA with a youth programme advocating peace through cross-cultural understanding. In 1956 she married fellow-student William Kerr Fraser (b. 1929, Kt. 1979) and they had four children. Settling in Edinburgh, Marion Fraser

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became Director of St Mary’s Music School, while Kerr Fraser entered the Civil Service, becoming Permanent Secretary at the Scottish Office (1978) then Principal of the University of Glasgow (1988). While serving on the Board of the Church of Scotland Woman’s Guild in the 1980s, Lady Fraser became interested in equality issues. She supported National President *Anne Hepburn in the heated debate around the ‘Motherhood of God’. She also joined the Church and Nation Committee, concerned with political and social justice. As a skilled committee chair, determined to make a difference, she chaired Scottish Action on Mental Health and several other voluntary organisations, including Christian Aid (1990–97), which took her to projects abroad. She sat too on the Board of Scottish Opera and set up the Friends of the Royal Scottish Academy. In 1994, the Queen appointed Lady Fraser Lord High Commissioner to the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland – HM’s official representative. In 1996, the Queen made her Lady of the Most Ancient and Noble Order of the Thistle (LT), with the title Lady Marion Fraser in her own right – the first non-royal woman to receive this honour, which was a fitting tribute for one who contributed so much to public life, and with good humour and grace. KMD • The Herald, 11 Jan. 2017, Life and Work, 11 Jan. 2017, The Scotsman, 5 Jan. 2017, The Telegraph, 20 Jan. 2017, The Times, 13 Jan. 2017 (obits); Tribute, University of Glasgow, 16 Jan. 2017, www.universitystory.gla.ac.uk/biography Private information. FRASER, Olive, born Aberdeen 20 Jan. 1909, died Aberdeen 9 Dec. 1977. Poet. Daughter of Elizabeth King, and Roderick Fraser, ironmonger’s assistant and farmer. Olive Fraser’s father emigrated to Australia before she was born. Her mother followed a year later, leaving the baby to be brought up by her great-aunt, Ann Maria Jeans, in Nairn. Her parents returned to Scotland when she was about nine years old, but her father maintained no contact, and she suffered a lifelong feeling of rejection. She was ­educated at Millbank School and Rose’s Academical Institution in Nairn, gaining an Honours English degree at the University of Aberdeen in 1931 and winning the Calder prize for English verse. She won a scholarship to Cambridge but, possibly for health reasons, did not take it up until 1933, when she went to Girton. Older than

the other students, she found it difficult to fit in; she was already showing signs of serious illness, then undiagnosed. She won the Chancellor’s Medal for English Verse in 1935, the first woman to do so, but could not keep up with her studies. During the Second World War, she served with the WRNS and experienced the Merseyside blitz of 1941, with serious effects on her physical and mental health. She was transferred to Naval Intelligence in 1941 and given a compassionate discharge in 1942. Having no settled home after her great-aunt’s death in 1944, she occupied a series of temporary jobs and lodgings. She was befriended by Franciscan friars, who supplied practical and spiritual help, and was received into the Catholic Church in 1952; some poems of devotion date from around this time. In 1951, in a national contest to mark the Festival of Britain, Olive Fraser gained equal first prize for lyrics in Scots. Some of her poetry was published but a planned collection never appeared in her lifetime; most of her work was published posthumously. She suffered a severe mental breakdown in 1956 and a pattern of admissions to mental hospitals, alternating with outpatient treatment, continued for the rest of her life. For much of the time, to her distress, illness or medication made writing impossible. In 1961 she moved to Inverness and in 1963 to Aberdeen where she continued treatment at the Royal Cornhill hospital. In 1968 a doctor there diagnosed her condition as hypothyroidism and prescribed a new course of treatment, with dramatic results. During the following ‘wonderful years’, as she called them (Fraser 1989, p. 29), she lost excess weight, improved in appearance, regained energy, and was able to write again. Though still on heavy medication, she visited friends, went on holidays and continued to produce striking poetry until her death in 1977. Her Aberdeen and Cambridge friend *Helena Mennie Shire edited a selection of her work in 1981 and the collected poems, The Wrong Music, in 1989. Their friendship was lightly fictionalised in Ali Smith’s Shire (2013). *Kathleen Raine’s Temenos magazine also published some of Olive Fraser’s work, in 1988. The Wrong Music includes a biographical introduction to this remarkable and little-known poet ‘of quite daunting spirit’ (ODNB, (2004)). marb • AUL: MS 3336. Papers of Olive Fraser. H. M. Shire (ed. and intro.) (1989) The Wrong Music: the poems of Olive Fraser, 1909–1977, (1981) The Pure Account: the poems of Olive Fraser; ODNB (2004).

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n. Knowles, born Ashford, Middlesex, 30 May 1920, died Grantown on Spey 11 Jan. 2013. Daughter of Lilla Shepherdson, and Maurice Knowles, pilot and travel guide; and JAMIESON, Hilda,‡ n. Stewart, born Broughty Ferry 12 Aug. 1913, died Dundee 12 May 2016. Daughter of Jean Robertson, and Alexander Stewart, accountant. Skiers and developers of Scottish skiing. Eileen Knowles studied history at Newnham College, Cambridge from 1938 to 1942. After working as a civil servant, she travelled to Vienna (1953) to study the violin and married Karl Fuchs (1924–90), an Austrian Olympic skier. In 1954 they purchased Struan House Hotel in Carrbridge to open the first ski hotel in Scotland, and established the Austrian Ski School. Known as the mother and father of Scottish skiing, for 30 years they helped to pioneer skiing in the Cairngorms. Their son Peter competed in the 1976 Winter Olympic Games, but, tragically, died in a car crash in 1980. The couple sold Struan House in 1984 and after Karl’s death in 1990 Eileen Fuchs moved to Grantown-on-Spey. She inaugurated the Karl and Peter Fuchs Memorial Fund for the benefit of young Speyside skiers. Hilda Jamieson, with her husband David Jamieson (1913–2002), developed the Glenshee Ski Centre. Fondly referred to as Britain’s oldest skier, she was Dundee ladies champion, Scottish ladies champion and a stalwart member of the Dundee Tennant Trophy Team. Skilled at many sports, Hilda Jamieson took her last swim and her last ski run aged 102. It was skiing in which she excelled, as probably ‘Scotland’s, the UK’s and possibly the world’s oldest active skier’ (The Herald 2016). GJ

fl. 1780–94. Chemist. Almost nothing is known of Elizabeth Fulhame, except her original contribution to chemistry. Her husband was Irish-born Thomas Fulhame, who enrolled in Joseph Black’s University of Edinburgh chemistry class of 1779–80. He graduated as a physician in 1784, and Joseph Black apparently noted that Dr Fulhame had found a new method of manufacturing white lead pigment, c. 1793. Presumably Elizabeth Fulhame was involved in her husband’s chemical researches, since she relates in her book (1794) that in about 1780 she became interested in the possibility of making cloths of gold, silver and other metals, by chemical processes. Her husband was sceptical of success, but she undertook an enormous range of ­practical experiments and, encouraged by a meeting in 1793 with Joseph Priestley, she published a book summarising her work, An Essay on Combustion. In due course, her experiments have also come to be seen as among the early precursors of photography, as she managed to create permanent images using the action of light on various metallic salts. The essay received favourable attention from a number of renowned contemporaries and though she then vanishes from the historical record, later histories of chemistry and photography have acknowledged her work. am-l

FUCHS, Eileen Margaret,

FULHAME, Elizabeth,

• Brown, R. S. (2000) The Extraordinary Story of Karl and Eileen Fuchs; The Guardian, 1 Feb 2013 (obit. Fuchs); Samuel, J. (2000) ‘The white stuff ’, The Guardian, 30 Sept. The Courier, 28 May 2016, The Herald, 3 June 2016 (obits Jamieson).

• Fulhame, E. (1794) An Essay on Combustion with a view to a new Art of Dying and Painting wherein the Phlogistic and Antiphlogistic Hypotheses are proved Erroneous. Cornish-Bowden, A. (1998) ‘Two centuries of catalysis’, Journal of Biosciences, 23, pp. 87–92; Davenport, D. A. and Ireland, K. M. (1991) ‘The ingenious, lively and celebrated Mrs Fulhame and the dyer’s hand’, Bull. Hist. Chem., 5, pp. 37–42; ODNB (2004); Schaaf, L. J. (1990) ‘The first fifty years of British photography: 1794–1844’, in M. Pritchard (ed.) Technology and Art: the birth and early years of ­photography.

G born Galloway c. 1213, died Barnard Castle 28 January 1290. Heiress, religious patron. Daughter of Margaret, daughter of David, Earl of Huntingdon, brother of William the Lion, and Alan, Lord of Galloway.

GALLOWAY, Dervorgilla of, (Dervorgilla Balliol),

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Dervorgilla was the younger daughter of Alan of Galloway’s second marriage and his third surviving legitimate child. The death of their legitimate brother made Dervorgilla and her two sisters heiresses to a landed inheritance centred on Galloway but scattered from Lothian to Northamptonshire.

FUCHS

n. Knowles, born Ashford, Middlesex, 30 May 1920, died Grantown on Spey 11 Jan. 2013. Daughter of Lilla Shepherdson, and Maurice Knowles, pilot and travel guide; and JAMIESON, Hilda,‡ n. Stewart, born Broughty Ferry 12 Aug. 1913, died Dundee 12 May 2016. Daughter of Jean Robertson, and Alexander Stewart, accountant. Skiers and developers of Scottish skiing. Eileen Knowles studied history at Newnham College, Cambridge from 1938 to 1942. After working as a civil servant, she travelled to Vienna (1953) to study the violin and married Karl Fuchs (1924–90), an Austrian Olympic skier. In 1954 they purchased Struan House Hotel in Carrbridge to open the first ski hotel in Scotland, and established the Austrian Ski School. Known as the mother and father of Scottish skiing, for 30 years they helped to pioneer skiing in the Cairngorms. Their son Peter competed in the 1976 Winter Olympic Games, but, tragically, died in a car crash in 1980. The couple sold Struan House in 1984 and after Karl’s death in 1990 Eileen Fuchs moved to Grantown-on-Spey. She inaugurated the Karl and Peter Fuchs Memorial Fund for the benefit of young Speyside skiers. Hilda Jamieson, with her husband David Jamieson (1913–2002), developed the Glenshee Ski Centre. Fondly referred to as Britain’s oldest skier, she was Dundee ladies champion, Scottish ladies champion and a stalwart member of the Dundee Tennant Trophy Team. Skilled at many sports, Hilda Jamieson took her last swim and her last ski run aged 102. It was skiing in which she excelled, as probably ‘Scotland’s, the UK’s and possibly the world’s oldest active skier’ (The Herald 2016). GJ

fl. 1780–94. Chemist. Almost nothing is known of Elizabeth Fulhame, except her original contribution to chemistry. Her husband was Irish-born Thomas Fulhame, who enrolled in Joseph Black’s University of Edinburgh chemistry class of 1779–80. He graduated as a physician in 1784, and Joseph Black apparently noted that Dr Fulhame had found a new method of manufacturing white lead pigment, c. 1793. Presumably Elizabeth Fulhame was involved in her husband’s chemical researches, since she relates in her book (1794) that in about 1780 she became interested in the possibility of making cloths of gold, silver and other metals, by chemical processes. Her husband was sceptical of success, but she undertook an enormous range of ­practical experiments and, encouraged by a meeting in 1793 with Joseph Priestley, she published a book summarising her work, An Essay on Combustion. In due course, her experiments have also come to be seen as among the early precursors of photography, as she managed to create permanent images using the action of light on various metallic salts. The essay received favourable attention from a number of renowned contemporaries and though she then vanishes from the historical record, later histories of chemistry and photography have acknowledged her work. am-l

FUCHS, Eileen Margaret,

FULHAME, Elizabeth,

• Brown, R. S. (2000) The Extraordinary Story of Karl and Eileen Fuchs; The Guardian, 1 Feb 2013 (obit. Fuchs); Samuel, J. (2000) ‘The white stuff ’, The Guardian, 30 Sept. The Courier, 28 May 2016, The Herald, 3 June 2016 (obits Jamieson).

• Fulhame, E. (1794) An Essay on Combustion with a view to a new Art of Dying and Painting wherein the Phlogistic and Antiphlogistic Hypotheses are proved Erroneous. Cornish-Bowden, A. (1998) ‘Two centuries of catalysis’, Journal of Biosciences, 23, pp. 87–92; Davenport, D. A. and Ireland, K. M. (1991) ‘The ingenious, lively and celebrated Mrs Fulhame and the dyer’s hand’, Bull. Hist. Chem., 5, pp. 37–42; ODNB (2004); Schaaf, L. J. (1990) ‘The first fifty years of British photography: 1794–1844’, in M. Pritchard (ed.) Technology and Art: the birth and early years of ­photography.

G born Galloway c. 1213, died Barnard Castle 28 January 1290. Heiress, religious patron. Daughter of Margaret, daughter of David, Earl of Huntingdon, brother of William the Lion, and Alan, Lord of Galloway.

GALLOWAY, Dervorgilla of, (Dervorgilla Balliol),

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Dervorgilla was the younger daughter of Alan of Galloway’s second marriage and his third surviving legitimate child. The death of their legitimate brother made Dervorgilla and her two sisters heiresses to a landed inheritance centred on Galloway but scattered from Lothian to Northamptonshire.

GARDEN

That prospect, and their royal blood, secured Dervorgilla and her sister, Christiana, important marriages. In 1233, Dervorgilla married John Balliol (before 1208–68), lord of Barnard Castle in Teesdale. Following her father’s death in 1234, Dervorgilla and John received one third of the Galloway inheritance, despite a rebellion in favour of her illegitimate brother. After 1237, she and her sister fell heirs to the earldoms of Chester and Huntingdon on the death of their uncle, and after 1246, Dervorgilla acquired most of the inheritance of the childless Christiana. By c. 1260, she possessed properties from Aberdeenshire to Middlesex, making her one of the greatest landholders of the day. Deeply pious, Dervorgilla expressed her faith through conspicuous religious patronage. In the 1260s, she founded convents in Dundee and Dumfries (Franciscan) and Wigtown (Dominican). Following John’s death in 1268, she founded in 1273 the Cistercian abbey of Sweetheart, where she was later buried, and in 1282 she issued statutes that formally instituted Balliol College, Oxford. Several devotional books from her own collection, which she gave to Sweetheart, survive. Dervorgilla and John Balliol had several children. Their youngest son, John, succeeded to the Balliol lands in 1278. Following the death of Alexander III in 1286 and of *Margaret, Maid of Norway, and his mother in 1290, John Balliol emerged as a competitor for the Scottish throne by virtue of Dervorgilla’s descent from David, Earl of Huntingdon, and in 1292 was awarded the kingdom. ro • Salter, H. E. (ed.) (1913) The Oxford Deeds of Balliol College. Brooke, D. (1994) Wild Men and Holy Places, pp. 140–9; Huyshe, W. (1913) Dervorgilla, Lady of Galloway . . .; ODNB (2004); Oram, R. (1993) ‘A family business? . . .’ Scot. Hist. Rev., 72, (1999) ‘Dervorgilla, the Balliols and Buittle’, Trans. Dumf. and Gal. Nat. Hist. and Antiqu. Soc., 73. GALLOWAY, Janet Anne (or Ann), born Campsie 10 Oct. 1841, died Glasgow 23 Jan. 1909. Educator, administrator. Daughter of Anne Bald, and Alexander Galloway, land surveyor and valuator. Janet Galloway had a good education followed by residence in France, Germany and Holland: she spoke fluent French and German. Her wide knowledge included history, archaeology, and business methods taught her by her father. Her support for women’s education led her to become a secretary of the AHEW and, after her father died in 1883, Honorary Secretary to Glasgow’s

Queen Margaret College, a post she held until her death. She lived in QMC, accepting no remuneration, but assisting greatly in the preparation of courses, making arrangements with professors and dealing with complaints. She carried this off with ‘supreme tact and unwearying patience’ (Murray 1914, p.12). In 1893, she was specially invited to the Great Exhibition in Chicago, representing QMC, and took with her a photograph of the women students of QMC’s Medical School, opened in 1890. She knew her students personally and kept in touch later. When QMC was incorporated into the University of Glasgow in 1892, she became a university official, proving a broad-minded and wise administrator. She was awarded Hon LLD by the University of Glasgow in 1907, and a memorial window in Bute Hall depicts her alongside *Isabella Elder and *Jessie Campbell. cjm • Univ. of Glasgow: Queen Margaret Coll. Archives. McAlpine, C. J. (1997) The Lady of Claremont House ; Murray, D. (1914) Miss Janet Ann Galloway and the Higher Education of Women in Glasgow; ODNB (2004).

fl. 1648/9. Lesbian accused of witchcraft. Maud Galt was the wife of John Dickie, wright, in Kilbarchan, with two servants of her own. One of these, Agnes Mitchell, came to the kirk session in September 1649 ‘with ane peice of clay formed be hir to the liknes of a mans priwie members doing quhat is abominable to think or speik of ’, complaining of an ‘injurie done to hir be the said Mauld’. Agnes Mitchell wanted the case taken to the local laird, but ‘was hinderit be sum of thame for the abominablness of the said act that it sould nevir be hard of ’. Two neighbours testified to her complaint; one, Marion Sempill, had intervened in an argument between Maud Galt and Agnes Mitchell to discourage an approach to the laird. The session investigated Maud Galt’s ‘vyle act in abusing ane of hir servants with ane peis of clay formed lyk the secreit members of ane man’, but abandoned the issue in favour of a witchcraft charge. She was evidently an assertive character; several people reported suffering misfortune after crossing her. There is no record of a commission for her trial, so her case may have been dropped. jg

GALT, Maud,

• RPC, 2nd series, viii, pp. 198–204.

born Aberdeen 20 Feb. 1874, died House of Daviot, near Inverurie, 3 Jan. 1967. Opera singer. Daughter of Mary Joss, and Robert Davidson Garden, cashier.

GARDEN, Mary,

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One of three children, Margaret Gardiner was raised abroad, then educated at Bedales School. In 1923, she began reading languages at Newnham College, Cambridge. An early romance with anthropologist Bernard Deacon ended with his death from fever in 1927, and for a while she taught school in Gamlingay. Her grandfather’s wealth gave her a moderate private income, and when she moved to Hampstead, her circle of creative friends included Barbara Hepworth, Ben Nicolson, W. H. Auden, Solly Zuckerman, Naum Gabo and J. D. Bernal, the microbiologist, who was the father of her son (academic Martin Bernal, 1937–2013). She began buying works from artists in the 1930s, always because she liked them, but also at critical junctures when it helped the artist financially and in morale. She acquired a remarkable personal collection, centred on the St Ives group including Hepworth, Nicolson and Gabo, and mostly consisting of small but powerful works. In 1956, on a visit to Orkney with her son, she impulsively bought a cottage on Rousay, and returned there often, founding the Sourin Trust to help Orcadian art students. In 1978, she fulfilled her dream, not an easy one, of donating her valuable collection in trust to Orkney, where it is housed in a former warehouse, the Pier Art Gallery, Stromness – puzzling to southerners, but dazzling to all who have visited it. Margaret Gardiner disliked being called a collector, still less a patron: she was also a campaigner, supporting the Howard League for Penal Reform, and opposing the Vietnam war. Her generosity was selfeffacing, her taste prophetic. sr

When Mary Garden was nine, the family travelled to America, moving several times, and spending a year back in Aberdeen. She first had singing lessons in Chicago, from 1890, where her potential became clear. Her parents could not afford professional training, but a wealthy Chicago family funded lessons in Paris; she moved there in 1896, studying with Trabadelo and Fugère. Her big break came in 1900: the soprano in Charpentier’s Louise at the Opéra-Comique was taken ill, and Mary Garden (already well briefed) took over, receiving huge acclaim. She became the Opéra-Comique’s leading soprano. In 1901, she created the title role in Pelléas et Mélisande by Claude Debussy, with whom she had a close relationship, as with composer-conductor André Messager. Mary Garden’s artistic innovation was to sing her roles with the dramatic projection of an actress, thus making her own some 35 roles including Thaïs and Salome. In 1907, she became a principal soprano with the Manhattan Opera House, and in 1910 moved to the Chicago Opera Company, where she remained until her retirement in 1931. She was ‘Directa’ of the Chicago Opera Association (1920–2) and spent lavishly, bankrolled by its wealthy president, Harold F. McCormick. Between 1903 and 1931, she made more than 40 recordings, and two films, both directed by Sam Goldwyn: Thaïs (1917) and The Splendid Sinner (1918). She was awarded the French Médaille de la Reconnaissance after working as a Red Cross nurse in the American hospital at Versailles during the First World War, and the Légion d’Honneur for promoting French music in America. Often in the news, both for her feuds with other divas and for her relationships with men, Mary Garden maintained a high profile after retirement, giving lectures and master classes, and publishing her memoirs. She eventually returned to live in Aberdeen. fj • Royal Coll. Music, London (Dept of Performance History): Garden Collection; Aberdeen City Museums and Art Gallery: stage costume; Newberry Library, Chicago: Garden Collection. Recordings: Pearl GEMM CD 9067 Mary Garden: a selection of her finest recordings. Garden, M. and Biancolli, L. (1952) Mary Garden’s Story; eODNB; Turnbull, M. T. R. B. (1997) Mary Garden. Additional information: Michael Turnbull. GARDINER, Margaret Emilia, born Berlin 22 April 1904, died London 2 Jan. 2005. Founder of Pier Arts Centre, Orkney. Daughter of Hedwig van Rosen, and Sir Alan Gardiner, Egyptologist.

• Gardiner, M. (1988) A Scatter of Memories, (1988) Barbara Hepworth: a memoir, (1988) The Pier Gallery: the first ten years. The Guardian, 5 Jan. 2005 (obit.); Homecoming: the Pier Arts Centre Collection at Tate St Ives (2003, catalogue); eODNB; The Pier Gallery, Stromness, Orkney (1978, catalogue); The Scotsman, 4 Dec. 2004 (feature). GARRETT, Edward

see MAYO, Isabella (1843–1914)

GARRY, Flora Macdonald, n. Campbell, born Mains of Auchmunziel, New Deer, Aberdeenshire, 30 Sept. 1900, died Comrie 16 June 2000. Poet. Daughter of Helen Mary Metcalfe, writer, and Archibald William Campbell, farmer and ­journalist. Flora Campbell, the second of four children, was brought up on the family farm and attended New Deer School and Peterhead Academy.

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She graduated with honours in English at the University of Aberdeen in 1922, trained as a teacher, and taught in Dumfries and Strichen before marrying, in 1928, Robert Garry (1900–93), later Regius Professor of Physiology at the University of Glasgow. She wrote in English and Scots, but it was her accomplished and creative use of the Doric of her native Buchan that gained her prominence. From the early 1920s, she gave talks on cultural topics and acted in radio dramas. Yet she did not think of writing in dialect until 1941, when she was persuaded by a friend to write the poem ‘Bennygoak’ in Scots. That became the title of a collection of her verse published by Akros (1974) and an audiotape by Scotsoun (1975). The book had sold out in a week and she found herself in great demand as a speaker and performer of her verse. In writing in Scots, Flora Garry was continuing a tradition of women dialect poets from the North East such as *Mary Symon. She was awarded an honorary degree by the University of Aberdeen in 1999, and there is a plaque to her as ‘The Buchan Poetess’ in New Deer cemetery. LW • Garry, F. (1974) Bennygoak and other Poems, (1995) Collected Poems. UAL: MS 3620/1/41. Interview with Flora Garry, recorded Jan. 1986. HSWW; The Scotsman, 22 June 2000 (obit.); ODNB (2004).

born Glasgow 18 Feb. 1897, died Glasgow 20 Feb. 1991. Radio and television broadcaster and producer. Daughter of Maggie Vint, and George Garscadden, accountant and businessman. Educated at Hutcheson’s Grammar School for Girls, Glasgow, Kathleen Garscadden studied piano and singing in London under Sir Henry Wood. During this time she visited a widely known fortune-teller, to be told, ‘I see you surrounded by hundreds of children, reaching out their arms to you’. She returned home intending to be a professional singer, only to become involved through family interest in the BBC’s first radio station in Scotland, which opened in Glasgow in March 1923. She soon found a niche broadcasting to young people, and the names ‘Auntie Cyclone’ (see Wood, Wendy), ‘Auntie Kathleen’ and finally just ‘Kathleen’ identified a legendary voice that was to span almost 40 years of broadcasts in Scotland. From 1940 to her retirement from the BBC in 1960, she was Children’s Hour organiser for Scotland. Her programmes were likened to a

GARSCADDEN, Kathleen Mary Evelyn,

collage of talent: many well-known broadcasters made their first appearance under her direction. She recalled with pleasure the young Gordon Jackson, Stanley Baxter, Eileen McCallum, the singer Sidney MacEwan and others. Writers, too, were encouraged, including Angus McVicar with his ‘Lost Planet’ adventures, Don Whyte, author of ‘Bran the Cat’ stories, and Allan MacKinnon whose ‘Boys of Glen Morrach’ ran for many years. In retirement she continued to devote herself to the wellbeing of children, inadvertently fulfilling the prophecy made to her many years before. DPW • Personal information. ODNB (2004) (Bibl.); Walker, D. P. (2011) The BBC in Scotland: the first fifty years. GEDDES, Anna, n. Morton, born Liverpool 19 Nov. 1857, died Lucknow, India 9 June 1917. Music teacher, partner in Patrick Geddes’s projects. Daughter of Frazer Morton, Liverpool merchant, and his wife. Anna Morton had a rigorous upbringing; music was the only indulgence permitted by her Presbyterian father, an Ulster Scot. After boardingschool and a year studying music in Dresden, she became a music teacher. Visiting her sister, wife of James Oliphant, headmaster of an Edinburgh school, she met Patrick Geddes (1854–1932), polymath, scientist, intellectual and town planner, whose ideals she wholeheartedly shared. They married in April 1886, and thereafter Anna was closely associated in all Patrick’s projects, as an independent-minded, ‘heroic’, selfless and ‘cheerful’ partner (J. Arthur Thomson, quoted Mairet 1957, p. 80). They were deeply attached: her role was often to look after finance and administration, the understated complement to his inspirational ideas. In a rundown tenement in James Court, where they moved to further Patrick’s Old Town rehabilitation schemes, Anna Geddes bore her first of their children: all three were educated at home. After 1891, her inheritance allowed them to move into another building project, Ramsay Garden. During the Summer Meetings organised by Patrick Geddes in the 1890s, Anna looked after many practical details, especially the music, calling on performers such as *Marjory Kennedy Fraser. From their home bases in Edinburgh, Dunfermline or Dundee, she partnered Patrick on many of his foreign travels, including a stint caring for Armenian refugees in Cyprus (1896–7), visiting settlements in the USA, and spending most of 1900 in Paris, where he ran a summer

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school during the World’s Fair. On the second of her working visits to India, where her husband was advising and lecturing in 1917, she died of enteric fever, unaware that their son Alasdair had been killed in France. While Patrick deeply regretted that he might have ‘subjected [Anna] to overstrain’, her support had been ‘the keystone of his career’ (Meller 1990, pp. 7–8). Their daughter, Norah Geddes m. Mears (1897–1967), following an unconventional and peripatetic upbringing with little formal education, became a pioneer garden designer or ‘landscape architect’. She planned and created gardens and playgrounds in slum areas of Dublin (1911–13) and in Edinburgh’s Old Town, as a member of Geddes’s Open Spaces committee. She also worked with her father and her future husband, Frank Mears, on designing Edinburgh Zoo (1913). SR

circles and Barbara Hamilton was particularly well connected. It seems likely, therefore, that ‘Jenny Geddes’ is the result of blending various local legends. If an energetic female parishioner did lead the 1637 riot, credit should probably go to Barbara Hamilton. lams • Baker, R. (1670) Chronicle of the Kings of England; Grant, F. J. (ed.) (1902) Commissariot Record of St Andrews Register of Testaments 1549–1800; Hewison, J. K., ‘Jenny Geddes: who was she?’, The Scotsman, 30 March 1932; Lothian, M. (1995) The Cutty Stool; ODNB (2004); Stevenson, D. (1972–4) ‘Conventicles in the Kirk, 1619–37 . . .’, Records of the Scottish Church History Society, 18; Wodrow, R. (1842–3) Analecta, 4 vols.

n. McDonald, born Edinburgh 13 April 1907, died Edinburgh 25 Jan. 2011. Glass engraver. Daughter of Catherine Roger Garland, and Donald Thomson McDonald, shipping clerk. Educated at The Mary Erskine School for Girls, Alison McDonald entered Edinburgh College of Art in 1925 to study drawing and painting, graduating in 1930, followed by a diploma in art and design. In 1931 she married artist William Hastie Geissler (1894–1963), with whom she had three children. From 1935, apart from four war years in the country, Edinburgh remained her home. In 1945, Alison Geissler returned to study at ECA, where the principal suggested glass engraving. Despite initial reluctance, she entered the small department established by *Helen Monro Turner in 1941, and quickly found she had natural aptitude, eventually becoming a highly skilled calligrapher and creator of striking images on glass. In 1947, on a lathe her husband obtained from Germany, Alison Geissler began working in a studio at home. Recognition by the Scottish Craft Centre helped her to obtain many prestigious commissions, ranging from presentations to British and foreign royalty to commemorative pieces. In 1983 she had a solo exhibition at Kelvingrove Museum, Glasgow, and in 1991 was awarded the MBE for her contribution to glass engraving, which she continued to practise until she was 94. JT

GEISSLER, Alison Cornwall,

• NLS: MSS 10503 ff. Geddes papers; Univ. of Strathclyde, Geddes papers. Geddes, Mr and Mrs P. (1897) Cyprus and its Power to help the East. Boardman, P. (1978) The Worlds of Patrick Geddes; Kitchen, P. (1975) A Most Unsettling Person; Mairet, P. (1957) Pioneer of Sociology: the life and letters of Patrick Geddes; Meller, H. (1990) Patrick Geddes; Reid, D. A. (2015) ‘Unsung heroines of horticulture: Scottish gardening women 1800-1930’, PhD, Edinburgh University, consulted online; Stephen, W. (ed.) (2014) Learning from the Lasses: women of the Patrick Geddes circle. GEDDES, Jenny, reputedly alive in 1670. Legendary rioter. On 23 July 1637, a riot against the Scottish Prayer Book erupted in St Giles’ church, Edinburgh. A plaque within the church states that ‘constant oral tradition’ has it that Jenny Geddes ‘struck the first blow’ by flinging her stool at the pulpit. A ‘Jenet Geddis’ was first mentioned in Edinburgh in 1661 but no link with 1637 was made. Edward Phillips claimed that ‘Jane or Janet Geddis’, who was ‘yet living’ in 1670 (Baker 1670, p. 473), was responsible for the stool-throwing incident, but no source was given. Contemporary accounts confirm that women were involved in the riot, but no names were recorded. A suggestion that Geddes came from St Andrews is false. That individual died before February 1637. A source known to Robert Wodrow claimed that the riot ringleader was ‘Mrs Mean’, Barbara Hamilton, wife of John Mein, an opponent of James VI’s religious policies. Women were prominent in nonconformist

• Blench, B. (1983) Alison Geissler, Glass Engraver; Goodearl, T. and M. (1988) Engraved Glass: international contemporary artists, pp. 70–2; Richardson, S. (1966) ‘A trio of capital craftsmen’, Scottish Field, March, pp. 35–6; The Scotsman, 2 Feb. 2011 (obit.). GILBERTSON, Jenny Isabel, n. Brown, born Glasgow 28 Oct. 1902, died Shetland 8 Jan. 1990. Film-maker

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and teacher. Daughter of Mary Dunn Wright, and William Brown, iron and steel ­merchant. After studying at Laurel Bank School and the University of Glasgow, teacher training and a secretarial course with journalism, Jenny Brown decided that educational film-making was for her after watching an amateur film of Loch Lomond. She bought a 16mm camera and practised filming squirrels in Kensington Gardens and barges on the Thames at Westminster Bridge. In January 1931 she went to Shetland where she had spent several summer holidays with crofter friends as a child. By autumn that year, she had made A Crofter’s Life in Shetland. John Grierson, whose film, Drifters, about North Sea herring fishers, laid the foundation for documentary film-making in Britain, advised her on technique, so she bought a 35mm Eyemo camera. Returning to Shetland, she made five documentary films and The Rugged Island (1934), a story of the harsh life of crofting families at that time. She also married the ‘romantic lead’, Shetlander Johnny Gilbertson (1908–67). During a 1934–5 lecture tour of Canada with The Rugged Island, she made Prairie Winter with Canadian film-maker Evelyn Spice. In 1940 she and Johnny Gilbertson set up a small Shetland hosiery business. From 1947 she taught in the local school until retiring in 1967. During that time they had two daughters, Helen and Ann, and she broadcast several short radio talks, wrote scripts for schools radio and two radio plays. A further film on Shetland, People of Many Lands – Shetland, made with the Scottish documentary film-maker *Elizabeth Balneaves, was broadcast by the BBC in October 1967. In 1970, Jenny Gilbertson returned to Canada where she made People of Many Lands – the Eskimo for the BBC and Jenny’s Arctic – Part 1 for the Canadian Broadcasting Company. To film Jenny’s Dog Team Journey in 1975 she travelled 300 miles over inhospitable Arctic terrain. In 1977–8, at the age of 76, she spent 13 months in Grisefiord, 900 miles north of the Arctic Circle, to make Jenny’s Arctic Diary, recording the life of the Inuit community. Jenny Gilbertson was remarkable in that all her films were what she described as a ‘one-woman job’. She wrote the script and did the filming, sound, lighting and direction herself. She was particularly keen to film people coping with harsh environments before their way of life disappeared. Her films have a very special quality; she identified with and was clearly accepted by the people being filmed. arw

• Crichton, R. (1999) Jenny Gilbertson: documentary filmmaker (programme notes for screening The Rugged Island, Stirling Univ.); Gilbertson, J. (n.d.) Autobiographical notes, Moving Image Archive, NLS; McBain, J. (n.d.) Draft obituary of Jenny Gilbertson, Moving Image Archive, NLS; *ODNB (2004). Private information. GILCHRIST, Anne Geddes, OBE, born Hulme, Lancs., 8 Dec. 1863, died Lancaster 24 July 1954. Folklorist and song collector. Daughter of Jane Helen Thomson, and George Gilchrist, bank cashier. Described as ‘a pure-blooded Scot on both sides of her family’, like her colleague *Lucy Broadwood she was a descendant of piano-maker John Broadwood, and related to Rev. Neil Livingston, whose 1864 edition of Millar’s 1635 Psalter inspired Anne Gilchrist to undertake seminal research and classification of early psalm tunes. She studied at the RAM and Trinity College, London, but had begun to memorise Scottish folk tunes from the age of six, influenced by her parents’ singing. She collaborated closely with Frank Kidson, notably on Orkney melodies and songs from the Borders, and joined the editorial board of the Journal of the Folk-Song Society. She described her collections as small in bulk but ‘catholic’, and wrote ‘To me, as to the true folk-singer, tune and words are interdependent – texts without tunes are deaf, and tunes without texts, blind’ (Gilchrist 1942, p. 63). She was awarded FSA, OBE, and the Gold Badge of the EFDSS. jp

• Vaughan Williams Library, Cecil Sharp House, London: Collection of Gilchrist’s publications. Gilchrist, A. G. (1911) ‘Note on the modal system of Gaelic tunes’, Jour. Folk-Song Soc., IV, 3, no. 16 (pp. 150–3, repr. as volume 1997), (1936) ‘Ten songs from Scotland and the Scottish Border’, Jour. Eng. Folk Dance and Song Soc., III, 1, pp. 46–71, (1942) ‘Let Us Remember . . .’ English Dance and Song, 6, 6, pp. 62–3. Dean-Smith, M. (1958) ‘The work of Anne Geddes Gilchrist, OBE, FSA, 1863–1954’, Proc. Roy. Music Assoc., 84th Session, pp. 43–53; Howes, F. (1954) ‘Anne Geddes Gilchrist’, Jour. Eng. Folk Dance and Song Soc., VII, 3, p. 202 (obit.).

born Bothwell, Lanarkshire, 5 Feb. 1864, died Glasgow 7 Sept. 1952. Physician. Daughter of Margaret Williamson, and William Gilchrist, farmer. Marion Gilchrist was sent to Hamilton Academy, before working on the family farm. She then gained her LLA (St Andrews) via the arts

GILCHRIST, Marion,

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faculty at Queen Margaret College, University of Glasgow (1890), but immediately transferred to study medicine, to which women had just been granted admittance. In protest against a ruling that excluded women from certain clinical demonstrations, she gathered the class tickets of her fellow female students and returned them. Notwithstanding, she excelled at her studies, and in 1894 she and Alice Lilian Louisa (Lily) Cumming (1870–1945 m. Robson) became the first women in Scotland to gain the university medical qualification MBChM. Marion Gilchrist specialised in ophthalmology, practising in Glasgow, where she shared consulting rooms with her friend Dr Katherine Chapman for many years. A keen supporter of the suffrage movement, she joined the Glasgow WSPU in 1907, along with *Janie Allan, *Margaret Irwin and *Grace Paterson. In later years, she energetically supported women in the professions. In 1914, she was appointed Assistant Surgeon at the Victoria Infirmary and later Ophthalmic Surgeon at Redlands Hospital for Women, which she served for many years. The first woman to chair the Glasgow division of the BMA, she was a Trustee of the Muirhead Trust which helped women to enter medical careers. The first woman to chair the Glasgow division of the BMA, she was a Trustee of the Muirhead Trust which helped women to enter medical careers. Marion Gilchrist’s interests were not confined to her profession: she was active in the suffrage movement and enjoyed music, art and a varied social life. RD • Gilchrist, M. (1926) ‘Amblyopia with haemorrhages due to tobacco & lead poisoning’, BMJ, vol. 1, 12 June, p. 990, (1926b) ‘Some medical legal aspects in ophthalmology’, Trans. Ophthalmology Soc. AGC; BMJ, 20 Sept. 1952 (obit.); Glasgow Herald, 5 Dec. 1994; HHGW; ODNB (2004); The University of Glasgow Story: wwwuniversitystory.gla.ac.uk/biography [G20 Gilchrist]

born Rutherglen 4 June 1882, died Edinburgh 14 Jan. 1947. Chess champion. Daughter of Mary Cameron, and John Gilchrist, ostrich-feather merchant and chess player. Mary Gilchrist began playing at Glasgow Ladies Chess Club, then moved to Edinburgh, where she joined the Edinburgh Ladies Chess Club (co-founded by *Sarah Siddons Mair) and became a leading player. She was Scottish Ladies Champion (1921, 1922, 1923 and 1938), British

GILCHRIST, Mary Dinorah,

Ladies Champion (1929 and 1934), and represented Scotland at the Women’s World Chess Championship (WWCC) in Folkestone in 1933, finishing in third place (out of eight entrants). In 1937, at the Stockholm WWCC, she shared eighth and ninth places (out of 26). After the Scottish Ladies Chess Association merged with the men’s Scottish Chess Association in 1920, Mary Gilchrist was one of four women who became presidents of the SCA, serving from Nov. 1937 until April 1938. Little is known about her life outside chess, but on her death certificate she is described as a ‘confectioner’. SR British Chess Magazine (1947), pp. 93–4; Gaige, J. (1987) Chess Personalia: a biobibliography, p. 140; MacIsaac, D. M. (1943) ‘Women’s chess in Scotland’, Chess (Dec.), p. 36; www. chess​scotland.com, information provided by website historian Alan McGowan (Feb. 2017). GILLESPIE, Lilias see SKENE, Lilias (1626/7–1697) GILLESPIE, Margaret, n. Duncan, born New Deer, Aberdeenshire, 12 Dec. 1841, died South Africa 1913. Singer of traditional songs. Daughter of Elizabeth Birnie, and William Duncan, millwright; ROBERTSON, Isabel (Bell), born Denhead of Boyndlie, Aberdeenshire 1 Feb. 1841, died New Pitsligo 19 August 1922. Informant on traditional songs. Daughter of Jean Gall, and James Robertson. The second of 11 children, Margaret Duncan was the sister of Rev. James Bruce Duncan who collected 466 songs from her for the folk-song collection he compiled jointly with Gavin Greig. Margaret Gillespie was the most prolific informant of the collection. She married James Gillespie, a slater, in 1867. After his death she moved to Glasgow where she worked as a sewing machinist and then took in lodgers, one of them James Matthew Brown, who noted down many of her songs on behalf of her brother, James. Her sources included her family and neighbours in her childhood, and others she encountered when she worked as a house servant. James Duncan began collecting from her in 1905 and continued until her departure in 1909 for South Africa, where her two sons lived. Her grand-daughter, Ursula Gillespie, recalled that she was known in the family for being a splendid dancer and playing the piano by ear. She ‘had a very nice voice, not high nor low’. Another major informant for the GreigDuncan collection, contributing 398 songs, was

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Bell Robertson, who had received little formal education and worked as a housekeeper. Unlike Margaret Gillespie, she was not a singer and gave no tunes, but her ballad repertoire was particularly rich. Her principal source was her mother who had learned songs from her mother. Bell Robertson, who also wrote devotional poetry, lived near Greig’s home at Whitehill: she was first an informant for Greig, then after his death for Duncan. Her memory was exceptional and she is the sole source for many of the songs in the collection. kmc

1924 she married George Armistead, a joiner and motor lorry driver. hec • PSMOHA: T122/88.

• Robertson, B. (1910) Poems and Songs. Buchan, D. (1997, 2nd edn.) ‘The Ballads of Bell Robertson’, The Ballad and the Folk (ch. 18); Campbell, K. (2007) Songs from North-East Scotland: a selection for performers from ‘The Greig-Duncan Folk Song Collection’; ODNB (2004) (Greig, Gavin; Robertson, Bell); Shuldham-Shaw, P., Lyle, E. B. et al. (eds) (1981–2002) The Greig-Duncan Folk Song Collection, 8 vols. (see Petrie, E., ‘Mrs Margaret Gillespie’ and ‘Miss Bell Robertson’ in vol. 8).

m. Armistead, born Edinburgh 17 July 1898, died Perth 2 Jan. 2002. First World War tram conductress (clippie). Daughter of Agnes Ewing, and Allan Anderson Gillon, fishmonger. When Mary Gillon left school at the age of 14 she worked at her father’s fish shop in Portobello, before joining the staff of the Buttercup Dairy. At the age of 17 she joined Edinburgh’s cable tram services as a clippie. ‘It was April or May 1916 I went on . . . they started to ask for conductresses for the trams as what men there were there, they trained as drivers so they couldn’t be taken away, and that’s when they started putting the girls on.’ Her usual run was on the Waterloo Place to Joppa route, frequently with the same driver. Her uniform was provided but she bought long boots to protect her legs when her skirt became wet on the outside steps. The shifts were nine hours long and the back shift didn’t finish until 11.35pm. At each terminus she had three minutes to check the seats and floor for lost property and litter, turn the seat backs to face the direction of travel, change the points and pull down the step for the passengers to board. There was no time allowed for a proper break; tea and sandwiches were eaten on the uncovered platform. On cashing up at the end of the shift, any shortages had to be paid for out of her wages. As many women did, she left after the war, in August 1919. ‘I look back on it as a very nice time, but it was understood that if your conductor came back, you gave up your shift.’ She went to work at the Craigmillar Creamery and on 12 June GILLON, Mary,

n. Aytoun, born Birmingham 7 March 1913, died Edinburgh 24 March 2005. Spanish Civil War veteran, Labour movement activist, charity campaigner. Daughter of Dorothy Henderson, and Scottish-born Rev. Robert Aytoun, Old Testament scholar. After her father’s death in 1920, Elizabeth Aytoun and her sisters were supported by family friend and benefactor Edward Cadbury of Bournville. She attended St Leonards School in St Andrews, and Oxford University. There she became a communist, and subsequently worked for the League of Nations Association in London. In 1937 she joined the opposition to Franco in Spain, caring for refugee children and meeting her future husband, Frank Girling (1917–2004). His career as a social anthropologist later took them to several English universities, before settling in Edinburgh where they raised three sons and a daughter. In 1959, Elizabeth Girling established the legendary Partisan Coffee House in Victoria Street, a spot soon favoured by left-wing writers, musicians and radical thinkers in 1960s Edinburgh, alongside the Traverse Theatre and Jim Haynes’ Paperback Bookshop. In later life, her tireless campaigning on allergies, accurate diagnosis and treatment culminated in her becoming a founding member of the Lothian Allergies Group. She remained a passionate socialist to the last. JRM

GIRLING, Elizabeth Jean St Clair,

• The Guardian, 5 May 2005, The Scotsman, 22 April 2005 (obits). GLAMIS, Janet, Lady see DOUGLAS, Janet, Lady Glamis (b. c. 1504, d. 1537)

this name was given posthumously to women artists of the period c. 1880–c. 1920 associated with the Glasgow School of Art (GSA). The label, modelled on that of the ‘Glasgow Boys’ (see McEwan 1994, pp. 234–5), was coined in part ironically, to draw attention to a remarkable generation of women students who specialised in painting, drawing, design, embroidery and crafts but who, it was argued, had been virtually eliminated from art history. Research by *Ailsa Tanner and colleagues, and the energetic campaigning of American-born Glasgow-resident

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(1947–98), who fought a tenacious battle against opposition from some quarters of the Glasgow art establishment, resulted in a successful exhibition with this title in 1988 and a definitive collection of essays (Burkhauser 1990). The GSA had been open to women since the 1850s, but particular impact was made by the post-1880 intakes. Women students made up 28% in 1881, 35% in 1891, and 42% in 1901. Their success was largely due to the encouragement of the incoming headmaster in 1885, Fra(ncis) Newbery (1853–1946), and his wife, *Jessie Rowat Newbery. Fra Newbery, who stayed at the GSA until 1918, began appointing female staff and encouraged design and crafts as much as easel painting and sculpture. Jessie Newbery wrote: ‘I believe that the design . . . of a pepper pot is as important in its degree as the conception of a cathedral’ (ibid., p. 74). Among the ‘Glasgow Girls’ are numbered several who have separate entries here: designers *Margaret and Frances Macdonald; painters *Katharine Cameron, *Norah Neilson Gray, *Anna Hotchkis, *Jessie M. King, *Bessie MacNicol; and embroiderers *Ann Macbeth and *Kathleen Mann. Others generally associated with the School include painters Mary Armour (1902–2000), Lily Blatherwick (1854–1934), known particularly for flower painting and printmaking, Stansmore Dean (1866–1944) and Margaret and Mary Gilmour (1860–1942 and 1872– 1938); calligrapher, illuminator and painter Helen Lamb (1893–1981), whose Celtic-inspired decorative work is best seen in the Dunblane Cathedral Rolls of Honour and Cradle Roll; painters Eleanor Allen Moore (1885–1955) (see Tanner, Ailsa) and Mary Viola Paterson (1899–1981); costume designer and painter Dorothy Carleton Smyth (1890–1933) – whose early death prevented her taking up a post as GSA’s first woman director – and her sisters Rose and Olive; painter and embroiderer Helen Paxton Brown (1876–1956); illustrator Annie French (1872– 1965); designer and enamellist Margaret De Courcy Lewthwaite Dewar (1878–1959); and the Walton sisters, Constance (1865–1960), Hannah and Helen. A striking feature of these years is the number of sisters who worked together. Most of these artists worked in more than one medium. The period of their training coincided with Art Nouveau, Symbolism, Japonism and the Celtic revival. Elements of all of these can be seen in the so-called ‘Glasgow style’, associated with the circle of Charles Rennie Mackintosh (1868–1928), who was married to *Margaret Macdonald. Middle-class Glasgow in its expansionist phase Jude Burkhauser

had money to spend on the decorative artworks, textiles and furnishings produced by young designers. These women, whose output ranged widely, were among the first to have their own studios, to live independent lives as ‘new women’ and, above all, to experiment in different media. Their importance as individuals varies: their careers were often disrupted by marriage (sometimes, inhibitingly, to other artists), children, illness, lack of resources and patrons. Their works are scattered, and posthumous recognition has been patchy but has gained considerable ground recently (see Cumming 2007, MSW 2016). SR • Arthur, L. and Macfarlane, F. C. (1980) Glasgow School of Art Embroidery 1894–1920; Burkhauser, J. (ed.) (1990) Glasgow Girls (Bibl.); Callen, A. (1979) Angel in the Studio; Cumming, E. (2007) Hand, Heart and Soul: the Arts and Crafts Movement in Scotland; DSAA; Dewar, M. De C. L. (1950) History of the Glasgow Society of Lady Artists; The Herald, 3 Oct. 1998 (obit. Burkhauser); Inglis, V. (2013) The Dunblane Cathedral Roll and the Art of Helen Lamb; McKenzie, R. (2009) The Flower and the Green Leaf: the GSA in thetTime of Charles Rennie Mackintosh; ODNB (2004) (see ‘Glasgow Girls’); MSW; Tanner, A. (1992) A Centenary Exhibition to Celebrate the Founding of the Glasgow Society of Lady Artists in 1882. GLENORCHY, Willielma, Lady, see CAMPBELL, Willielma, Viscountess Glenorchy (1741–86)

born Muthill, Perthshire Jan. 1750, date and place of death unknown. According to Perthshire tradition, ‘Empress of Morocco’. Daughter of Ann Key, and Andrew Gloag, ­blacksmith. Helen Gloag was brought up at Mill of Steps. Her history was first recorded in 1837 by the Rev. James Walker, minister of Muthill, and later further expanded in Perthshire (and credited by antiquarian Robert Chambers). It seems she did not get on with her stepmother. Aged 19, the story goes, she left Perthshire with friends, intending to emigrate to South Carolina. The vessel carrying her to America is hijacked by Sale corsairs. At their base in Morocco, she joins the harem of the ‘Emperor’, Sultan Sidi Muhammad, and bears him two sons, later involved in the succession crisis after his death, when another son, Mulay al-Yazid, rules briefly (1790–1). Meanwhile, her brother trades with Morocco, bringing gifts for her family and a local farmer, John Bayne, and assuring them of her prosperity. There is no documentary evidence, beyond Walker’s account, that she got to Morocco at all.

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Sidi Muhammad did have white wives and concubines, but Dr Lempriere, who visited Sidi’s harem in 1789, saw no sign of a Scottish sultana. Perhaps Helen Gloag invented her own Perthshire legend to cover up a different career in the Mediterranean, yielding the fine china (not a Moroccan product) which she apparently did send home. ALRC

Jean Glover was no worse than any other in her situation and she was always faithful to her ‘ne’erdo-weel’ husband. She died in Ireland while on tour and was performing up until two months before her death. mb • MacIntosh J. (1910) The Poets of Ayrshire ; ODNB (2004); Paterson, J. (1840) The Contemporaries of Burns; Stenhouse, W. (1853) Illustrations of the Lyric Poetry and Music of Scotland; Tytler, S. and Watson, J. L. (1871) The Songstresses of Scotland.

• Calder, A. (2003) Gods, Mongrels and Demons; Chambers, R. (1868) Traditions of Edinburgh; Broughton, E. (1841) Six Years in Algiers; Lempriere, W. (1793) A Tour from Gibraltar to Morocco; McKerracher, A. (2000) Perthshire in History and Legend; New Statistical Account of Scotland (1845) vol. 10, p. 318; Rogers, P. G. (1992) A History of Anglo-Moroccan Relations to 1900; Shearer, J. (c. 1860) Antiquities in Perthshire.

GORDON, Henrietta, Duchess of,

born Townhead, Kilmarnock, 31 Oct. 1758, died Letterkenny, Ireland, in or after 1801. Travelling actor and singer. Daughter of Jean Thomson, and James Glover, weaver. Jean Glover was educated at the parish school. She was never meek and blossomed into a splendidly beautiful ‘wild child’. Dressed in a buff jacket, a linsey-woolsey petticoat and with her hair in a snood, she attended the local fairs and races. She enjoyed playing with fire and when asked to join one of the travelling shows leapt at the chance. She fell in love and eloped with the leader of the troupe, a Mr Richard – actor, conjurer and allround scoundrel. The players performed historical displays and Jean Glover was acknowledged to be their best actor and singer, known for her renditions of Scots songs, particularly ‘Green Grow the Rashes’. Before one performance in Irvine c. 1795, dressed in scarlet, tinsel and glass beads, she played the tambourine to attract customers. One old woman is reported as saying, ‘Weel dae I remember her, and thocht her the brawest leddy I had ever seen step in leather shoon’ (MacIntosh 1910, p. 31). Tradition has it that Robert Burns took down the words of Jean Glover’s song ‘Ower the Muir Amang the Heather’ after hearing her perform it in the Old Commercial Inn, Kilmarnock, and sent it to James Johnson for inclusion in the The Scots Musical Museum (1792). Burns liked neither Jean nor her husband and added a footnote to Johnson: ‘This song is the composition of a Jean Glover, a girl who was not only a whore; but also a thief, and in one or other character has visited most of the correction houses in the west . . . I took the song down from her singing as she was strolling through the country with a sleight-ofhand blackguard’. Others were a little kinder and said that though she ‘rugged and reived’ (robbed),

GLOVER, Jean,

n. Mordaunt, born 1681, died Prestonhall, Dalkeith, Oct. 1760. Estate manager and innovator, Jacobite. Daughter of Carey Fraser, and Charles Mordaunt, 3rd Earl of Peterborough and 1st Earl of Monmouth. Henrietta Mordaunt was a Protestant but the Mordaunt family had been Roman Catholic and this explains her marriage to Alexander Gordon, Marquess of Huntly and later 2nd Duke of Gordon (1678–1728) in 1706. Her husband was a Jacobite who fought at Sheriffmuir in 1715 and was then imprisoned for eight months. He took no further role in public affairs but lived with his wife in Gordon Castle. Interested in agricultural improvement, the Duchess was credited with innovations to develop the estate. Independent and energetic, she ran the estate after her husband’s death, bringing up her 12 children in the Protestant faith and gaining a pension for these efforts. When her eldest son Cosmo reached the age of 18, she purchased Prestonhall House near Dalkeith, employing William Adam to improve the property in 1738. The Duchess of Gordon may have shared her husband’s Jacobite sympathies and she famously provided a breakfast for Charles Edward Stuart on his return to Scotland in 1745, an action that lost her a lifelong pension. However, she also interceded on behalf of family members who were adversely affected by their husbands’ roles in the rebellions. As an elite woman with Whig connections, she called on her father’s friends in order to support relatives; the prospect of witnessing kin suffer dire circumstances was revolting to her, regardless of politics. NMC

• NRS: Gordon Castle Muniments GD44. Szechi, D. (2006) 1715: The Great Jacobite Rebellion; ODNB (2004).

OBE, born Keith 18 May 1901, died Carlisle 11 May 1988. Marine biologist. Daughter, out of wedlock, of Maggie Lamb,

GORDON, Isabella,

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domestic servant, and James Gordon, general labourer. After Keith Grammar School, Isabella Gordon entered the University of Aberdeen, where in 1923 she obtained the first Kilgour Research Scholarship to study sea fans. The next two years were spent at Imperial College studying sea urchin embryology, followed by two years in the USA on a Commonwealth Fund Fellowship at Woods Hole Laboratory, Palo Alto Marine Station, and Yale University. In 1928, she was appointed curator of Crustacea, the first woman on the full-time permanent staff of the BM (Natural History). The ‘Grand Old Lady of Carcinology’ (study of crustacea), (Holthuis, 1989, p. 93) retired in 1966. Her numerous publications, mostly on decapod crustaceans and sea spiders, and her helpfulness towards researchers had established her as an internationally respected carcinologist. A highlight of her career was a month-long visit in 1961 to Japan as the guest of Japanese scientists; she gave a public lecture in honour of the Emperor Hirohito, also a marine biologist. She was awarded the OBE that year. Although traditional in her work as curator, manager and researcher at the museum, ‘as an unmarried woman scientist in what was still . . . a male-dominated world, she was conscious of her trail-blazing role’ (Rice 1988, p. 704). jrr • Gordon, I. (1932) ‘Pycnogonida’, Discovery Rep., 6, ­pp. 1–138, (1953) ‘On a new crab from Cadaques, NE Spain’, Eos. Madrid, 28, 4, pp. 303–14, (1961) ‘Crustaceans, Japan and I’, Contemp. Japan, 27, 1, pp. 115–26, (1974) ‘Crustacea’, Encycl. Brit., pp. 310–19. See also Bibl. Holthuis, L. B. and Ingle, R. W. (1989) ‘Isabella Gordon’, Crustaceana, 56, pp. 93–105, (Bibl.); Rice, A. L. (1988) ‘ Dr Isabella Gordon’, Jour. Crustacean Biology, 8, 4, pp. 703–5; WoM. GORDON, Jane (Jean), Countess of Bothwell (1566–67), Countess of Sutherland (1573–1629),

born 1545, died Dunrobin 14 May 1629. Daughter of Elizabeth Keith, and George, 4th Earl of Huntly. After the collapse of her father’s rebellion in 1562 against *Mary, Queen of Scots and his death, Jane Gordon and her mother were given places at court. The family’s restoration included an alliance, promoted by the Queen, between Jane’s brother George Gordon, later 5th Earl of Huntly, and James, 4th Earl of Bothwell (1534/5–78), part of which was Jane’s marriage to Bothwell on 22 February 1566, her tocher (dowry) of £8,000 Scots going to clear his debts. The wedding was a Protestant ceremony. However, to satisfy those

Catholics involved, Archbishop John Hamilton granted the couple a dispensation to marry, since they were related within the Catholic prohibited degrees (Parliament removed these restrictions in 1567). The marriage was unhappy – Bothwell’s attachment to Queen Mary may have pre-dated Lord Darnley’s murder on 10 February 1567 – and Countess Jane was granted a divorce by the secular Commissary Court on 3 May 1567 on the grounds of his adultery with her servant, Bessie Crawford. Archbishop Hamilton, whose consistorial authority Mary had restored for the purpose, pronounced the marriage annulled on 7 May because no dispensation had been procured. His own dispensation was suppressed in the interests of all concerned, not least Jane Gordon, who wished release and who retained it. It was discovered among Sutherland papers at Dunrobin in the 1800s. Jane Gordon returned north in 1567. She married Alexander, 12th Earl of Sutherland ­(1552–94), on 13 December 1573; they had seven children. Due to Sutherland’s ill-health, and after his death, she managed the vast Sutherland estates while bringing up her grandchildren. In 1599, she married Alexander Ogilvy of Boyne, suitor of her youth and widower of Mary Beaton (see Maries, The Four). Her many surviving letters testify to her energy. She remained a Catholic, sheltering missionary priests at Dunrobin, and was buried in Dornoch Cathedral with honours usually given to a Sutherland earl. Contemporaries praised her conduct throughout the tragedy of her early life, and her son paid tribute in his history: ‘a vertuous and comelie lady, judicious, of excellent memorie and of great understanding above the capacitie of her sex; . . . she brought to a prosperous end many hard and difficult bussiness . . .’ (Fraser 1892, p. 168). mhbs • NRS: Sutherland Muniments (Deposit 313). Fraser, W. (1892) The Sutherland Book, 2 vols (incl. Sir Robert Gordon’s History); ODNB (2004) (see Gordon, Jean); Stewart, J. (1874) A Lost Chapter in the History of Mary, Queen of Scots Recovered; Sanderson, M. H. B. (1987) Mary Stewart’s People (Bibl.). GORDON, Jane, Duchess of see MAXWELL, Jane, Duchess of Gordon (c. 1749– 1812) GORDON, Jean, born c. 1670 into one of the gypsy tribes of Kirk Yetholm, died Carlisle 1746. Tall, hawkfaced and swarthy, Jean Gordon was the inspiration for Meg Merrilees in Sir Walter Scott’s novel Guy Mannering. She married Patrick Faa, one of the ‘royal’ gypsies, and they had nine

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sons. Patrick Faa was convicted of fire-raising and general misdemeanours and banished to Queen Anne’s American colonies for life in 1714. Jean Gordon was to lose all her sons, one by murder and eight on the gallows, mainly for the crime of being ‘evil-doing gypsies’. In 1732, in her 60s, she was charged at Jedburgh Court with ‘being an Egyptian, common vagabond and notorious thief ’ and plea bargained that she would leave Scotland forever. She survived in the north of England until 1746. Known as a staunch Jacobite, she was ducked in the river Eden by a Hanoverian mob until she drowned, it is said crying out ‘Chairlie Yet’. we • NRS: Jedburgh Minute Books and Court Records 1714–32. Gordon, A. (1980) Hearts upon the Highway; Lang, J. (1913) North and South of the Tweed. GORDON, Maria Matilda, n. Ogilvie (May), DSc, PhD, FGS, DBE, LLB, born Monymusk, Aberdeenshire, 30 April 1864, died London 24 June 1939. Geologist, campaigner for female education and equality, musician, translator. Daughter of Maria Matilda Nicol, and Rev. Alexander Ogilvie, headmaster of Robert Gordon’s Hospital. The eldest daughter of eight children, Maria Ogilvie was born into an influential, educationally oriented Aberdeen family, surrounded by high-achieving brothers. She attended Heriot Watt University but finished her degree at University College London (1890), specialising in geology, botany and zoology. In 1891 she travelled to the University of Munich to pursue private research in geology (women were not admitted into the university) for Professors Zittel and Hertwig on the difficult mountain terrain of South Tyrol. She learnt to climb and studied German. In 1893 she gained a DSc from London University for her meticulous contributions to palaeontological and stratigraphical understanding of the Dolomites. She recognised the importance of microscopic identification of coral skeletons for classification. This was rewarded (1900) with the first PhD awarded to a woman in Munich. She was given many honours, including honorary doctorates, from universities worldwide, but to her considerable annoyance was largely ignored in the UK until, aged 68, she finally accepted the Geological Society of London’s Lyell medal in recognition of her outstanding work and became one of its first female Fellows. At 71 she received an honorary doctorate from Edinburgh University. World War I interrupted her research; returning to the

Dolomites in 1922, she found her research work was lost and had to start again. In 1895 she married the supportive Dr John Gordon in Aberdeen; she had three surviving children. When her husband died in 1919 she moved to London to be near her brother and daughter. Away from her scientific research, she was a JP, the first woman chair of the Marylebone Court of Justice, and honorary president of the Associated Women’s Friendly Society, National Women Citizens’ Association and, in 1916, NCW. In 1920 she chaired the newly formed Council for the Representation of Women on the League of Nations. She received a DBE from King George V in 1935. She died in London but her ashes are buried in Aberdeen next to her husband, son and infant daughter, with a gravestone of Aberdeen Granite, appropriately for a geologist. Maria Ogilvie Gordon was arguably the most prolific and original female geological writer of the nineteenth century with 35 original scientific papers, while also fighting for women’s rights in education, politics, peace and society. In 2005 a fossil fern was named Gordonopteris lorigue after her by Wachtler et al., a continuing accolade to her work. CVB • Burek, C. V. (2004) ‘Gordon, Dame Maria Matilda Ogilvie (1864–1939)’, in B. Lightman (ed.) Dictionary of NineteenthCentury British Scientists, 2, pp. 799–802; (2009) ‘The first female fellows and the status of women in the geological society’, in C. Lewis and S. Knell (eds) The Making of the Geological Society of London; Wachtler, M. and Burek, C. V. (2007) ‘Maria Matilda Ogilvie Gordon (1864–1939): a Scottish researcher in the Alps’, in C. V. Burek and B. Higgs (eds) The Role of Women in the History of Geology; ODNB (2004). GORDON, Mary Clark, n. Gilmour, born Glasgow 16 May 1882, died Pasadena, California, USA, 23 August 1963. Hollywood character actor. Daughter of Mary Gibbons, and Allan Gilmour, salesman and storeman. In her teens, Mary Gilmour sang in the local church choir before becoming a professional contralto, working under her maiden name. Based in Glasgow, she toured Britain and America, often working with Sir Harry Lauder. On 8 December 1908, she married William Gordon, yarn salesman, and in 1910, she had a daughter, Molly. Her husband abandoned her at the end of the First World War. As soon as the war was over, with her daughter and her mother she left Scotland for San Francisco, where her two brothers had settled.

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She hoped to continue her singing career there. When the family arrived, her mother became ill and her plans to tour were put on hold. The three generations of women moved to Hollywood and, needing to make money quickly to support her family, she took a job as cook in the RobertsonCole Studio (which later became the famous RKO Studios). From 1925 Mary Gordon supplemented her income by working as an extra in silent movies. Her distinctive Glaswegian accent led to a role in The Little Minister (1934), which was set in Scotland, and to the job of tutoring the star, Katharine Hepburn, in a Scottish accent. From then until her retirement in 1950 she was one of Hollywood’s best-loved character actors. She worked in more than 200 films, often playing Irish mothers as well as Scottish ones. Her films include The Bride of Frankenstein (1935), Bonnie Scotland (1935) and Fort Apache (1948), but her most famous role was as the housekeeper, Mrs Hudson, in the long-running Sherlock Holmes series of films. A popular volunteer at the Hollywood Canteen, entertaining troops during the Second World War, Mary Gordon had the honour of spending her last days in the Motion Picture Home which was set up by the studios to care for those who had devoted their lives to the movies. ak • Interview with Molly Dutton (Mary Gordon’s daughter), 1994. Katz, E. (1994 edn.) The Macmillan International Film Encyclopedia; Quinlan, D. (1995) Quinlan’s Film Character Actors. GORDON CATHCART, Emily Eliza Steele, Lady, n. Pringle, m1 Gordon, m2 Cathcart, born 1845, died

Margate, Kent, 8 August 1932. Controversial Hebridean landowner. Daughter of John Robert Pringle and his wife. Emily Gordon assumed possession of the islands of Barra, South Uist and Benbecula in 1878 on the death of her first husband, John Gordon, son of the notorious evictor and emigrationist, Colonel John Gordon of Cluny. In December 1880, in St George’s, Hanover Square, London, she married Sir Reginald Archibald Edward Cathcart Bt. The harsh estate regime continued under their joint control until his death in 1916. An absentee proprietor, living in the south of England, Lady Cathcart rarely visited her Hebridean properties and was disliked by both her tenants and the Congested Districts Board (CDB) appointed in

1897 to tackle continuing problems of Highland land hunger and poverty. The CDB’s 15-year lifespan was punctuated by land raids, notably on Barra and Vatersay, as crofters reacted against her refusal to assign more land for their use. Repeated occupations led to the CDB’s purchase of part of Barra in 1900 and Vatersay in 1909. Lady Cathcart was criticised for her support for emigration, perceived as the estate management’s weapon against unwanted Catholic tenants. In 1883, while the Highland land war was raging, she and Ranald Macdonald, the unpopular estate factor, orchestrated a short-lived scheme to send families to Wapella and Regina in Canada’s Northwest Territories. Parsimonious treatment of the colonists engendered bad publicity into the 20th century, as did a belief that Lady Cathcart’s share interests in the Canadian Pacific Railway and Hudson’s Bay Company lay behind the scheme. Renewed attempts to encourage the emigration of young people from her estates in 1911 failed, while the plan of the Scottish priest and emigration agent, Andrew MacDonell, to create a colony of Hebridean Catholics in Alberta in the 1920s was tarnished by a perception that he was collaborating with an anti-Catholic, proemigration landowner. Lady Cathcart was living near Ascot at the time of her death. Her will included a provision for establishing the Long Island Emigration Fund, but such was the depth of hostility that the trustees refused to implement her wishes. mdh • Scottish Catholic Archives: DA66/77/3, MacColl, priest, Ardkenneth, South Uist to Bishop of Argyll and the Isles, 27 Sept., 28 Oct. 1883; Saskatchewan Archives Board: R-2.999, reel 1, bundle 138, Lady Cathcart’s Canadian Crofters’ Reference Book, 1893–1921. Cameron, E. A. (1996) Land for the People?; Campbell, J. L. (ed.) (1936) The Book of Barra.

born Altyre, Morayshire, 26 May 1837, died Crieff 4 Sept. 1924. Travel writer and explorer. Daughter of *Lady Eliza Maria Campbell (see Gordon-Cumming, Lady Eliza) and Sir William Gordon-Cumming. Constance Gordon-Cumming was the twelfth child of wealthy landowners in Altyre and Gordonstoun, with strong family and business ties to Britain’s colonies. Her childhood was spent shuttling between Scotland and England, receiving a sporadic private education. Between 1868 and 1880 she embarked on a series of national and international tours, mainly to visit friends GORDON-CUMMING, Constance Frederica,

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and family, from which she would produce 13 published travel books. Her first work, From the Hebrides to the Himalayas (1876, later revised), was a rather unwieldy account of her sojourn across the Hebridean islands and her travels through India and the Himalayas. The explorer *Isabella Bird, with whom she shared common interests and a friendly rivalry, read the book proofs while Constance Gordon-Cumming was living in Fiji between 1875 and 1877 (later recounted in At Home in Fiji, 1881). Subsequent works chronicled with increasing clarity her experiences in exotic locations, including the USA, Tahiti, Samoa and Tonga. In 1880 she retired to Crieff, continuing to write books and contributing articles to leading periodicals, including Blackwood’s Magazine, Contemporary Review, Cornhill Magazine, Leisure Hour, Good Words and Cassell’s Family Magazine. At its best her writing responded to her surroundings sympathetically and generously, offering candid insights into exploitative colonial behaviour where she saw it. In general, her work was characterised by a mixture of conventional religiosity, anthropological interest, vivid description and generalised commentary, with some class affectation. df • NLS: Blackwood papers, MS 4000–4940; MS series 30,000; Reading Univ.: Chatto & Windus papers. Gordon-Cumming, C., Works as above, and see Bibl. DLB Gale, vol. 174; HSWW (Bibl.); Harris, E. J. (2006) Theravada Buddhism and the British Encounter: religious, missionary and colonial experience in nineteenth-century Sri Lanka; Morin, K. M. (2008) Frontiers of Femininity: a new historical geography of the nineteenth-century American West; ODNB (2004); WoM.

fired . . . by frequent visits from such artists as Sir Edwin Landseer’ (Gordon-Cumming 1904, p. 38) and advice from Benjamin West. Sir Henry Raeburn portrays her holding a pencil and George Saunders’ portrait (Private Collection) shows her with a sketchbook as well (Smailes). In 1839, a geologist ‘introduced her to the delights of . . . collecting the beautifully preserved fossil fishes’ (Andrews 1982, p. 25) in a small quarry near Nairn. Louis Agassiz visited Altyre in 1840 to see her large collection. Her generous gifts to him and to other geologists are now in Neuchatel University, the NHM, Oxford, Paris and elsewhere. The Altyre Collection of Middle Old Red Sandstone fishes (NMS) was a major source for Agassiz’s 1844–5 monograph on fossil fish, for which she also drew several plates. Although he praised her ‘precision of detail and . . . artistic talent’, her watercolours were later taxed with ‘many confident inaccuracies’ (ibid., p. 31). During her last pregnancy, she was ‘severely injured in stopping a bolting horse in a gig wherein sat a terrified woman’ (GordonCumming 1904, p. 43) and died less than a month after the baby’s birth. Her daughter *Constance Frederica Gordon-Cumming became an encyclopaedic travel writer. jrr • NLS: Dep 175, Gordon-Cumming of Altyre Papers (quoted with permission). Andrews, S. M. (1982) The Discovery of Fossil Fishes in Scotland up to 1845; Gordon-Cumming, C. F. (1904) Memories; ODNB (2004) (see Cumming, Constance Frederica Gordon). WoM Personal communication: Helen Smailes.

born Hamilton, 10 May 1933, died Wishaw, 9 July 2014. Olympic and Commonwealth swimmer. Daughter of Wilhelmina Alexander, and Gavin Gordon, manager of Hamilton Baths. Swimming from an early age with the Motherwell-based swimming team coached by David Crabb (who had also trained *Nancy Riach and *Margaret Jarvie), Elenor Gordon represented Britain at the Olympics three times, and was the only British swimmer to win a medal at the 1952 Helsinki Games (bronze, butterfly). Her reputation as a Scottish champion swimmer was secured in Auckland, New Zealand, at the 1950 Empire Games (later the Commonwealth Games) where, aged 16, she won the gold medal for the 220 yards breaststroke. She next won gold in both the medley relay and 220 yards breaststroke at the

GORDON-MCKAY, Helen Orr (Elenor),

n. Campbell, probably born 1798 in Inveraray, died Altyre, near Forres, 21 April 1842. Fossil collector and illustrator. Daughter of Lady Charlotte Maria Campbell (daughter of 4th Duke of Argyll), and John Campbell of Shawfield and Islay. In 1815 the beautiful Eliza Campbell married Sir William Gordon-Cumming of Altyre and Gordonstown. Despite having 13 children, this exceptional woman obviously took her mother’s advice to ‘avoid growing into a squashy milk cow . . . [and] not let women prose to you all day long about cake and candles and clothes’ (NLS: Dep 175/164/1). Her many accomplishments included painting and horticulture; she designed the gardens at Altyre House, produced new varieties of plants by crossing, and went salmon fishing. Her ‘artistic talent . . . was GORDON-CUMMING, Lady Eliza Maria,

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Vancouver Empire Games in 1954, and married Kenneth Alexander McKay the same year. In common with the majority of athletes in these years, she had to maintain her amateur status, working full time as a secretary. In later years she was officially declared a professional, after refusing to give the Scottish Amateur Swimming Association the required portion of the £5 fee she received from the BBC for her appearance on TV to announce her retirement. After retirement from her sport, she entered the largely male-dominated sphere of sports journalism, writing a weekly column for the Daily Express and Evening Citizen. She was inducted to the Scottish Sports Hall of Fame in 2003. EM • Scottish Sports Hall of Fame, ‘Elenor Gordon’, www.sshf.co.uk/inductees/g-k/elenor-gordon; Walker, G. (1994) ‘Nancy Riach and the Motherwell swimming phenomenon’, in G. Jarvie and G. Walker (eds) Scottish Sport in the Making of the Nation: ninety-minute patriots?, pp. 142–53; Williams, J. (2014) ‘Representing self, community and nation: the Empire and Commonwealth Games careers of influential British women athletes 1930–1966’, Sport in History 34, 3, pp. 476–97. GORMLA (Gormshuil Mhór), fl. 17th century (traditionally), Lochaber. Witch figure. Gormla is the leading Gaelic witch figure, others being less well known outside their localities. A woman of the same name is associated with Skye, perhaps due to the vagaries of tradition or the name being the cognomen of more than one person. Gaelic nomenclature groups all witches under the term banabhuidseach (a loanword from English ‘witch’). Possibly Gaelic tradition vaguely reflects a system of shamanism, with its own hierarchy. The elements of Gormla’s name (‘deep blue’ and ‘noble’) have produced in some dialects Gormshuil – ‘the blue-eyed’. Such witches are formidable characters, with definite prestige, feared but treated with respect, perhaps enjoying some of the immunity protecting poets in Gaelic society. In tradition Gormla Mhór gives valued advice to Cameron of Lochiel, head of his clan, and is also one of the witches who bring about the death by drowning of MacLeod of Raasay in 1671. jm ac i

• Black, R. (ed.) (2005) John Gregor Campbell’s The Gaelic Otherworld; Camshron, A. (1957) ‘Gormshuil Mhór na Maighe’, An Gaidheal, March; McKerracher, A. (1994) ‘The Great Gormshuil’ The Scots Magazine, April, pp. 374–81; MacKellar, M. (1889–90) ‘Legends and traditions of Lochaber’, Trans. Gael. Soc. Inverness, 16, pp. 267–76.

fl. Auldearn 1662. Confessed witch. The year 1662 produced some of the worst witch-hunting in Scottish history; one of the most infamous cases occurred in the village of Auldearn, Nairnshire. The trial of Isobel Gowdie is unusual in that her confessions were allegedly given voluntarily and no torture was used. However, the use and nature of judicial torture in Scottish witchcraft trials are contentious subjects. It is likely that her elderly body was pricked with a long needle to search for the witch’s mark (a spot insensitive to pain) and she may have been kept awake for days while being interrogated. Some aspects of her confession reflected beliefs held a century earlier. She interspersed witchcraft, fairy lore and diabolism to a degree unparalleled in any other known Scottish witch trial. She affirmed she was a member of a coven of thirteen people, each with a named spirit to wait upon her, and spoke of riding through the air on ‘cornstraws’ with her companions, attacking people whom the devil had instructed them to harm. Continental confessions often spoke of infant sacrifice and cannibalism, but Isobel Gowdie reported dancing, drinking and eating fine meats. She also said that a woman, Jean Martin, named ‘Maiden’ by the devil, was so called because the ‘devil always takes the Maiden in his hand next to him, when we dance’ (Crim. Trials, p. 606). Martin regretted several deaths, which she believed she had caused with arrows supplied by the devil. Other aspects are more unusual. Isobel Gowdie admitted meeting with the fairies on several occasions: ‘we went in to the DownieHills; the hills opened, and we came to a fair and large braw room’ (ibid. p. 611). The presence of large bulls bellowing indicated wealth and status to an agricultural community. She witnessed the manufacture of elf arrowheads by diminutive, hump-backed ‘­elf-boys’. She reported the fairies’ names and dress; her own sprite, ‘The Red Reiver’, was clothed in black. Such details seem to have annoyed her interrogators who tried to alter her words with a demonic twist or stopped writing down parts that did not fit their own prejudices. Although Auldearn was slow to experience the full force of the Presbyterian system, Isobel Gowdie’s confession demonstrates the tenacity of witch and fairy traditions, despite almost a century of intensive persecution. Her ultimate fate is unknown. An orchestral work by James MacMillan, ‘The confession of Isobel Gowdie’, was premiered in 1990. lfh GOWDIE, Isobel,

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GRAHAM • Crim. Trials, vol. iii, pp. 602–16. Henderson, L. and Cowan, E. J. (2001) Scottish Fairy Belief: A History; Wilby, E. (2010) The Visions of Isobel Gowdie: magic, witchcraft and dark shamanism in seventeenth-century Scotland; ODNB (2004); WoM. GRAHAM, Helen, m. Tovey-Tennent, born Edinburgh 8 June 1806, died London 14 June 1896. Diarist. Daughter of Jane Ferrier, and Brigadier-General Samuel Graham, sometime Deputy-Governor, Stirling Castle. The eldest of four children, Helen Graham corresponded with her aunt, novelist *Susan Ferrier. Her mother was celebrated beauty Jane Graham (1767–1846), who inspired Robert Burns’s verse, ‘To Miss Ferrier’ (1787). Jane Graham rescued and made drawings of 16th-century carvings from Stirling Castle, published, with her drawings and accompanying illustrations by the renowned architect Edward Blore, as Lacunar Strevelinense (1817). Apart from a period in Ireland (1808–13), where her father was posted, Helen Graham was raised in Scotland and educated at home, mainly by her mother, learning French, Italian and Latin. She kept at least eight volumes of (mainly unpublished) diaries. The earliest ones (1820–1) concern English travels. The most interesting (1823–6, published 1957) vividly depict early 19th-century Scottish domestic life and manners – too rarely portrayed in that period’s fiction. She records meeting Walter Scott and family, and describes Edinburgh gatherings involving other well-known figures, with well-selected (sometimes Scots) dialogue. Sharing Susan Ferrier’s eye for absurdity, she describes church attendance together: ‘Dr Grant or rather (as Aunt Susan says) “Grunt”, preached, and she desired me to cough pretty loud, if I saw her head “nid-nid-noddin” of which she was afraid. A sermon was announced to be preached for the benefit of indigent old men. Aunt Susan told me as we came out that she heard of a boy who, asked where he had been, replied he had been at church to hear a sermon about “indigestible old men”.’ The later diaries run from 1826 to 1854, the last ones being fragmentary. After marrying Colonel Hamilton Tovey-Tennent in 1836, she lived in Stanmore, then a market town near London, and in London itself. ca

• NLS: Acc. 8585, Ferrier papers. Irvine, J. (ed.) (1957) Parties and Pleasures, the diaries of Helen Graham, 1823–1826, intro. Marion Lochhead. Family papers.

n. Marshall, born Lanarkshire 29 July 1742, died New York, USA, 27 July 1814. Educator and poor-relief worker. Daughter of Janet Hamilton, and John Marshall, tenant farmer. Isabella Marshall grew up at Elderslie, Ayrshire. Her devout family had close connections to the local minister, Rev. Dr John Witherspoon, later President of Princeton. In 1765, she married John Graham, a Paisley doctor and surgeon for the Royal American Regiment. When the regiment travelled to British North America in 1767, the couple left behind two sons from John Graham’s first marriage, as well as their son; the infant died shortly afterwards. A daughter was born in Montreal and two more in Fort Niagara where the family lived for four years. The family planned to settle in the Mohawk Valley but in 1772 the regiment was ordered to Antigua where John Graham died in November 1774; a son was born posthumously. Distraught, Isabella Graham and her children returned from Antigua to Scotland, where she cared for her impoverished father and taught school in Paisley. After a business venture failed, friends including *Willielma Campbell, Lady Glenorchy, helped her establish a successful school in Edinburgh in 1779–80. She also founded ‘The Penny Society’, a fund for mutual relief in sickness, which became The Society for the Relief of the Destitute Sick. When Dr Witherspoon visited Scotland in 1785, he suggested that Isabella Graham move to America. Aided by a legacy from Lady Glenorchy, she and her daughters moved in 1789 to New York, where she opened a school. Her charitable ventures included organising the Society for the Relief of Poor Widows with Small Children (1797), one of the first of its kind in America. After retiring from teaching in 1798, she spent the next decade as the Society’s director. She opened Sunday schools, worked with the Bible Society, was involved with her daughter Joanna Bethune in founding the Orphan Asylum Society in 1806, and served as superintendent of the Magdalen House (1811). In 1814, shortly before her death, she helped found the Society for the Promotion of Industry Among the Poor. ee

GRAHAM, Isabella,

• Bethune, J. (ed.) [1816] (1843) The Power of Faith, Exemplified in the Life and Writings of the Late Mrs Isabella Graham; E. T. James et al. (eds) (1971) Notable American Women 1607–1950 (Bibl.); Religious Tract Society (1832) The Life of Mrs Isabella Graham of New York.

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born Orphir, Orkney, 26 April 1860, died Aro-Chuku, Nigeria, 14 Oct. 1933. Missionary-nurse. Daughter of Isabella Manson, and John Graham, weaver and crofter. One of five children, Margaret Graham trained as a teacher in Orphir and later as a nurse in Glasgow. In 1895, she joined the Women’s Foreign Mission Committee (WFMC) in Old Calabar, Nigeria, where her nursing skills saved the lives of many sick crew members on British trading ships. Subsequently, she became the first matron of Duketown Hospital. In 1901, a military campaign was launched against the Aro tribe and she tended the casualties at Itu, the Aro heartland Aro-Chuku, and Bende. She received the Africa General Service medal with clasps and in 1906 was appointed a Serving Sister on the Roll of the Order of the Hospital of St John of Jerusalem. Distressed by the Aro subjugation, Margaret Graham again offered nursing service two years into retirement, specifying the Aro people. Her work varied from dressing ulcers and stitching knife wounds to rescuing twins and training women in child welfare. Twin births were regarded with superstition so she supervised the building of a sanctuary for outcast women and babies. Another new venture was a dispensary, for which she funded medicines. She adopted an orphan, Okorafo, and trained an Aro chief ’s descendant, Lazarus Okoroji, as dispensary assistant. Fledgling missionaries were teased by her but quickly respected her devotion to the Aros, despite the gruelling conditions. She worked with two other women missionaries, Agnes Siddons Arnot (n. Young) (1881–1953) and Susan McKennell from Armagh, Ireland. Agnes Arnot, from Kinross, Principal of the Slessor Memorial Home, was a former assistant to *Mary Slessor and had returned to the field after her husband’s death. She helped outcast women to earn a ­livelihood by teaching them to embroider on linen, using traditional Aro female designs. Margaret Graham was nominated ‘Orkney’s Own Missionary’ in 1924. She continued her work even when, with a broken leg, she had to be carried. Drumbeats broadcast her death and she was buried next to Mary Slessor. There are memorials to Margaret Graham in Nigeria and Orkney. rl GRAHAM, Margaret Manson,

• Maurice Gray papers (privately held); NLS: Letterbooks and Minutes of the WFMC; Orkney Archives: Records of Paterson Church, Kirkwall, Orphir Public School, Kirbister, Orphir School Log Books.

Interview with Rev. R. M. MacDonald (1995) by author. Arnot, A. S. (1934) ‘A Calabar heroine. The inspiring career and personality of Margaret Manson Graham’, Life & Work, Feb.; Beattie, J. A. T. (1978) The River Highway: a personal record of the Scottish Mission in Nigeria from 1927 to 1957, The Church of Scotland Overseas Council; The Orcadian, 1 March 1956 and 14 Oct. 1993; Mowatt, H. (1956) ‘Sister Graham: a great Orkney lady, she gave her life to Nigeria’, The Orcadian, 1 March; Paterson Church United Free Church Quarterly Record, April 1924. GRAHAM, Maria (Lady Callcott), n. Dundas, m1 Graham, m2 Callcott, born Cockermouth 19 July

1785, died Kensington 28 Nov. 1842. Author and traveller. Daughter of Ann Thompson, of an American loyalist family, and Rear-Admiral George Dundas. Maria Dundas was well educated at the Miss Brights’ school in Abingdon. In February 1805, visiting her uncle James Dundas in Edinburgh, she met leading literary and academic figures, including Dugald Stewart and Thomas Brown. Her academic interests apparently led Brown to christen her ‘metaphysics in muslin’ (Gotch 1937, p. 75). In 1809, sailing with her father to India, she met Lt. Thomas Graham of Fintry, and they married on 9 December. Her travel writing was intellectually and politically ambitious. In her Journal of a Residence in India (1812), and even more in the scholarly Letters on India (1814), she wrote not only of everyday life, but also of the history, languages, religions and antiquities of India, drawing on the work of contemporary orientalist scholars, including Scottish friends Sir James Mackintosh, John Leyden and Colin Mackenzie, and scandalising some readers. On returning to Scotland, the Grahams lived in Broughty Ferry for a number of years. Maria Graham published the first book in English on Poussin. Later, sailing with her husband to South America, and remaining there after his sudden death in April 1822, she kept detailed journals of her visits to Brazil and Chile, which she published with extensive historical introductions. She strongly sympathised with the Chilean struggle against Spain and with the efforts of her friend Admiral Lord Cochrane to forward Chilean independence. Her famous description of the elevation of the land during the 1822 earthquake in Chile led to a major attack on her in 1834 by G. B. Greenough of the GSL, but she was vindicated by the observations of Charles Darwin from the Beagle in 1836. In Brazil, having met the Empress Leopoldina, she was

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g­ overness to the royal children for about 12 months from April 1824. In 1827, she married the artist (later Sir) Augustus Wall Callcott (1779–1844), returned to literary London, and continued her writing career in history, art history, and books for children, including pioneering work on Giotto and other Italian primitives. Her best-known later work, Little Arthur’s History of England (1835), displayed a patriotic spirit consistent with her earlier support for a nationalist politics in South America. It was reprinted and updated many times, most recently in 1962. JR

anti-suffrage cause, leading the way in ‘womanly service for her country’ (ASR June 1910). Like *Lady Griselda Cheape, she was deeply hostile to the cause of women’s suffrage. Branches of the Women’s Anti-Suffrage League (WASL) were founded in Scotland in 1909, and in May 1910, on the formation of the Scottish National WASL, the Duchess, as President, circulated an appeal ‘to convince women of the danger to the state if votes were given to large numbers of inexperienced women debarred by nature and circumstances from the requisite political knowledge’ (ASR May 1910). Active until the League dissolved in 1918, she was one of the first women to be awarded the GBE in that year, and one of the first women JPs appointed in 1920. jr

• Works as above; [Callcott, M. G.] (C. E. Lawrence, ed., 1936 [rev. 1962]) Little Arthur’s History of England . . . The century edition; Graham, M. (1835) ‘On the reality of the rise of the coast of Chile, in 1822, as stated by Mrs Graham’, Amer. Jour. for Science and Arts, 28, pp. 239–47. Akel, R. (2009) Maria Graham: a literary biography (Bibl.); Gotch, R. B. (1937) Maria Lady Callcott; Gust, O. (2017) ‘Mobility, gender and empire in Maria Graham’s Journal of a Residence in India (1812)’, Gender and History, 29, 2, pp. 273–91; Hagglund, B. (2011) ‘The botanical writings of Maria Graham’, Journal of Literature and Science, 4, 1, pp. 44–58; ODNB (2004); Rodenas, A. M. (2013) Transatlantic Travels in Nineteenth-Century Latin America: European women pilgrims; Thompson, C. (2012) ‘Earthquakes and Petticoats: Maria Graham, geology, and early nineteenth-century “polite” science’, Journal of Victorian Culture, 17, 3, pp. 329–46.

• Anti-Suffrage Review, 1909–10, 1918; Checkland, O. (1980) Philanthropy in Victorian Scotland; Glasgow Herald, 23 Nov. 1940 (obit.); The Times, 23 Nov. 1940 (obit.), The Times, 7 Dec. 1940.

fl. c. 1570–c. 1600. Heiress. Daughter of John Grahamslaw of Newton. By 1586, Helen Grahamslaw’s eight brothers had all been murdered by the Turnbulls as part of a vicious Border bloodfeud. Her father decided to dispose of his estates in a dignified manner, selling his lands to Robert Ker, a political ally and younger son of Robin Ker of Ancrum, for £4,000, reserving a life rent to himself, and arranging Helen’s marriage to Robert. This helped ensure that his ancestral lands would not be overrun by the avaricious Turnbulls. They continued to harass Helen Grahamslaw and her new husband, stealing sheep belonging to her in 1588. Robert had died by 1600, at which time animosity still raged between his wife and the Turnbulls. The Turnbulls were brought to account only after the Union of the Crowns. mmm

GRAHAMSLAW, Helen, of Newton,

GRAHAM, Violet Hermione, Duchess of Montrose,

GBE, m. Graham, born London 10 Sept. 1854, died Abbots Langley, Herts, 21 Nov. 1940. Anti-suffragist and philanthropist. Daughter of Jane Seymour, and Sir Frederick Graham of Netherby, On 24 July 1876 Violet Graham married Douglas Graham, 5th Duke of Montrose ­(1852–1925); they had three sons and two daughters. Committed to philanthropy, the Duchess was President of the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Families Association in Scotland from 1900, and from 1909 President of the Scottish Red Cross and Vice-President of the Territorial Nursing Service. She took a particular interest in Govan, founding the West Govan Child Welfare Association, the Montrose Holiday Home for poor children on Loch Lomond, and the Montrose Maternity Home. She also presided over the Training Home for Midwives and Nurses and the Elder Cottage Hospital there. She was awarded an LLD by the University of Glasgow for her philanthropic work. The Anti-Suffrage Review (ASR) recorded that such extensive experience in organisations helping women made her an ‘invaluable acquisition’ to the

• NRS: Lothian MSS, GD40/1/379/4, GD40/3/382; Register of Deeds, RD1/24/1 fos 1823. Crim. Trials, vol. ii, pp. 370–5, 378–81, 419–21, 442; RMS, v, no.1058. GRANGE, Rachel, Lady see CHIESLEY, Rachel

(1679–1745)

n. Macvicar, born Glasgow 21 Feb. 1755, died Edinburgh 7 Nov. 1838. Letter writer, essayist and poet. Daughter of Duncan Macvicar, army officer. Her mother was of the family of Stewart of Invernahyle in Argyllshire.

GRANT, Anne, of Laggan,

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Soon after Anne Macvicar’s birth, her father joined the army and was sent with his regiment to North America. Aged 3, she and her mother joined him and settled near Albany, New York, where they lived for most of the following decade. As a child she attracted the attention of Catalina (or Margaretta) Schuyler, a member of a prominent New York family, who provided most of her formal education. In 1768, the family returned to Glasgow and in 1773 moved to Fort Augustus where her father became Barrack-Master. In 1779 she married Rev. James Grant (d. 1801), an army chaplain, scholar and minister of the Highland parish of Laggan, where they lived for the following 23 years. There she learnt Gaelic and ‘found all the virtues of simplicity and family values that she felt were increasingly being threatened elsewhere in Britain and Europe’ (SHA p. 66). Between 1780 and 1799, they had 12 children, all of whom she outlived, except her youngest son, John, who became the editor of her posthumous Memoir and Correspondence (1844). In 1801, her husband died suddenly, leaving her with eight children to support and no income other than two pensions totalling about £40. In 1803, she began her literary career with the publication, by subscription, of a volume of poems. Soon afterwards she began to collect the letters she had written to friends from Fort Augustus and Laggan, publishing them as Letters from the Mountains (1806). Characterised by ‘vivacity and strong sense’ (DNB vol. VIII, p. 377), the letters made her reputation. In 1803 she moved to Woodend, a village near Stirling, and in 1806 to Stirling, taking live-in pupils to supplement her income. There she wrote Memoirs of an American Lady (1808), an account of the Schuyler family that includes her own childhood memories of America before the revolution, of Indian tribes and Dutch settlers. She moved to Edinburgh in 1810, where she published Essays on the Superstitions of the Highlanders of Scotland (1811), possibly her most important work, and in 1814 the last of her major publications, Eighteen Hundred and Thirteen: a poem. Despite the deaths of her adult children and a fall followed by disability, she played an important role in Edinburgh literary life, as hostess, prolific correspondent and occasional translator of Gaelic poetry. A High Tory, she nevertheless had Whig friends and knew many leading women writers, including *Elizabeth Hamilton, *Eliza Fletcher and *Joanna Baillie. Sir Walter Scott described her as ‘a woman whose tongue and pen are rather overpowering’ although

‘an excellent person, notwithstanding’ (ibid., p. 377). In 1826, he and others procured a government pension of 100 shillings that, with several legacies from old friends and pupils, made her last years comfortable. Contemporary appreciation of her work was significantly influenced by the respect she commanded for her courage and virtue, her deep faith, ‘extraordinary good sense, and . . . uncommon powers of mind’ (Wilson 1876, p. xviii). She was also recognised as a thoughtful observer of minority cultures. m v h • Grant, A., Works as above; McCue, K. and Perkins, P. (ed. and intro.) (2016) Women’s Travel Writings in Scotland, 4 vols, including as vols 1–3 Grant, A. Letters from the Mountains (Bibl.). DNB; Grant, J. P. (ed.) (1844) Memoir and Correspondence of Mrs. Grant of Laggan; Hagglund, B. (2010) Tourists and Travellers: women’s non-fictional writing about Scotland, 1770–1830; HSWW (Bibl.); ODNB (2004) (Bibl.); Perkins, P. (2010) Women Writers and the Edinburgh Enlightenment; SHA; Wilson, J. G. (1876) Introduction to Memoirs of an American Lady with Sketches of Manners and Scenery in America. GRANT, Beatrice,

n. Campbell, baptised Kilmartin 2 Sept. 1761, died Nairn 20 Feb. 1845. Author and educator. Eldest daughter of Matilda Campbell, and Neil Campbell of Duntroon, impoverished laird. In 1784 Beatrice Campbell married Patrick Grant, minister of Duthill near Carrbridge. Widowed in 1810, she moved her school and youngest children to Inverness where in 1812 she published (as Mrs Grant, late of Duthel) her first book, a guide for inexperienced mothers. Following the loss of her young son and daughter she turned to writing moral tales for young working-class men and women, as books and in The Cheap Magazine. She also contributed to middling-class magazines including La Belle Assemblée, New Monthly Magazine and Repository of Arts. A purposeful and assured woman, Beatrice Grant is one of several early nineteenth-century women in the Highlands who found publishing a way of making their voices heard, providing role-models beyond the domestic. Among those who found her memorable were *Anne Grant of Laggan, *Elizabeth Grant of Rothiemurchus and *Dorothea Primrose Campbell. ERW

• Grant, B. (1812) Sketches of Intellectual Education and Hints on Domestic Economy, Addressed to Inexperienced Mothers, 2 vols, (1815–16) Popular Models and Impressive Warnings for the Sons and Daughters of Industry, 3 parts, (1822) The History

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GRANT of an Irish Family . . . to which is added . . . the exemplary mother, etc. Campbell, D. P. (1816) ‘To Mrs Grant, of Duthell. On reading her “Intellectual Education.”’, in Poems, pp. 135–7; Couper, W. J. (1914) The Millers of Haddington, Dunbar and Dunfermline: a record of Scottish bookselling; Grant, A. (1809) Letters from The Mountains; being the real correspondence of a lady, between the years 1773 and 1807; Grant, E. (1992) Memoirs of a Highland Lady.

m. Smith, born Edinburgh 7 May 1797, died Baltiboys, Co. Wicklow, Ireland, 16 Nov. 1885. Diarist. Daughter of Jane Ironside, of Durham, and Sir John Peter Grant of Rothiemurchus. Much of Elizabeth Grant’s childhood, 1802–12, was spent in southern England, but holidays were spent on her father’s estate, The Doune, Rothiemurchus, Inverness-shire, and from 1812 to 1814 the family resided there. In 1814, financial difficulties took them to Edinburgh, where an early love affair was ended by her parents because of a family feud. The Grants travelled to Europe, but by 1820 returned to Rothiemurchus; in 1826, to help out family finances, Elizabeth began to write for Fraser’s Magazine and others. In September 1828, her father’s appointment as judge at Bombay took the family to India where, in June 1829, she married Colonel Henry Smith (1780–1867). On the Baltiboys estate in Ireland, which he had inherited, the couple embarked on a programme of improvements, interrupted by two years in France, 1843–5 with their three children. From 1845, Elizabeth Smith began to write memoirs, for her family rather than for publication, vividly recreating her early years, especially the life of Rothiemurchus and the Highland community. She recalled, unsentimentally and in detail, the domestic lives of local households, the countryside and its hardships, and the working practices of Highland men and women such as the timber floaters of the Spey. She recreated harvest home in Rothiemurchus, the gaiety of the Kinrara home of *Jane Maxwell, Duchess of Gordon, and her own ‘coming out’ at Inverness in 1814. She wrote, too, of the different social worlds of Edinburgh in the early years of the century, of fashion, literature and the law, providing a lively record of parties, theatre and opera-going. The memoirs include sharp words on colonial society and enthusiasm for her experiences of India. From 1840 to 1885, she kept a diary intermittently of her life in Ireland: only selections from the 1840s have been published, as an important GRANT, Elizabeth, of Rothiemurchus,

record of the famine years, 1845–9. Her perspective is that of a conscientious, improving, resident landlord, but also a ‘benevolent patrician’ (HSWW, p. 214), convinced of the rightness of the policy of evictions and the move to larger farms. The same complacency appears in her articles of the 1840s in Chambers’s Edinburgh Journal. Selections from her memoirs were published after her death by her niece, Lady Strachey, as Memoirs of a Highland Lady (1897); immediate success rapidly meant three more editions. The full text was published by Canongate, 1988, 1992. jr • Grant, E. (1849–50) ‘Mrs Wright’s Conversations with her Irish Acquaintances’, Chambers Edinburgh Journal, XIII, XIV, [1897, 1898], (1988), (1992) Memoirs of a Highland Lady, (1991) The Highland Lady in Ireland, (1996) A Highland Lady in France. ECSWW; HSWW (Select Bibl.); ODNB (2004) (see Smith, Elizabeth); Thomson, D. and McGusty, M. (eds) (1980) The Irish Journals of Elizabeth Smith 1840–1850. GRANT, Isabel Frances (Elsie), MBE, born Edinburgh 21 July 1887, died Edinburgh 19 Sept. 1983. Historian and folk museum pioneer. Daughter of Isabel Mackintosh of Balnespick, and Colonel Hugh Gough Grant CB. Elsie Grant was raised in London by her grandfather, Field-Marshall Sir Patrick Grant, and aunt, Frances Gough Grant, following her parents’ posting to India. Educated privately, she often recalled childhood visits to the British Museum. The most formative influences, however, came from a visit to Stockholm and Oslo which included the pioneering museum projects of Skansen in Sweden’s Nordiska Museum and Norway’s Sandvig Collection at Lillehammer. These earliest European ‘folk museums’, together with a ‘costume gallery’ in the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam, inspired in her the vision of a museum for the Highlands and Islands to preserve their vanishing material culture, Gaelic traditions and values. Elsie Grant’s writing career was encouraged by John Maynard Keynes, for whom she worked as a researcher. He published several of her articles in The Economic Journal and two of the Supplements (1926, 1928) appeared under her name. Her contribution to modern scholarship, especially Highland history, is still recognised and respected. Her first two major books, Everyday Life on an Old Highland Farm, 1769–82 (1924, 1981) and The Social and Economic Development of Scotland before 1603 (1930) expanded the paradigm of

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Scotland’s academic history. The first closely analysed the farm accounts of William Mackintosh of Balnespick, her ancestor, and described the social and economic context of Dunachton in Badenoch, an open-field farmtown held in runrig. Of particular significance is her sympathetic evaluation of the benevolent tacksman, a class traditionally vilified for its perceived role in the decline of Gaelic society. Travel and research, including conversations with an older generation and extensive fieldwork in Badenoch and Strathspey, led to her involvement in the Highland Exhibition staged in Inverness in 1930, when 2,100 artefacts were collected for a ‘national folk museum’. When this failed to develop, Elsie Grant used a personal legacy to establish a folk museum in the disused Free Church in Iona in 1935. Later she moved the rapidly growing collection to Pitmain House in Kingussie, where the Highland Folk Museum opened in 1944 as Am Fasgadh (‘The Shelter’). With four reconstructed buildings, it illustrated the complex history of farming and fishing, crofting and domestic life, local varieties and regional variations between Mainland Scotland and the Hebrides. Highland Folk Ways (1961) stands as a handbook for this pioneering enterprise. The University of Edinburgh awarded Elsie Grant the honorary degree of LLD in 1948 for her creation of Am Fasgadh ; when she retired to Edinburgh in 1954, it was run by the four Scottish universities until taken over by Highland Region in 1975. Awarded an MBE in 1959 for her contributions to scholarship, she continued to publish, especially on Highland social history and the medieval Lordship of the Isles. Her hospitable Edinburgh house in Heriot Row was a meeting place for scholars at her frequent and congenial soirées. hc • Grant, I. F., Works as above, and (1935) The Lordship of the Isles, (1980) Along a Highland Road, (2007) The Making of Am Fasgadh: an account of the origins of the Highland Folk Museum, and see Bibl. below. Cheape, H. (1986) ‘Dr I. F. Grant (1887–1983): The Highland Folk Museum and bibliography of her written works’, Rev. of Scot. Culture, 2 (Bibl.); Noble, R. (1977) ‘The changing role of the Highland Folk Museum’, Aberdeen Univ. Rev., 47; *ODNB (2004). GRANT, Isobel, fl. 1637. Quasi-historical figure involved in a notorious case of murder. Daughter of Grant of Tulloch (aka Fear Thulach, aka McJokkie).

Isobel or Iseabail Dhubh Thulach had apparently given her affections to a MacGregor ‘ruffian’ known as Iain Dubh Gearr. Both the Grants and MacGregors were drawn into a fight near her homestead with a rival suitor for her hand. The subsequent decreet alleges that a number of men, some of them MacGregors, set upon one John Steuart, near Tulloch in Strathspey, ‘shot him through the thighs, broke his thigh bones, cut off his fingers and cut off his head and danced and made merry about him a long time’ (McLean 1994–6, p. 125). It is assumed that Isobel is the daughter referred to in the charge, preceding the decreet. This refers to ‘Johne Grant alias McJokkie in Tulloch, his two sons and daughter’ (ibid.). This event is thought to lie behind the composition of the famous Reel of Tulloch. A variant of the tale (for which lyrics and tune survive) has Isobel Grant running off with one of the MacGregors, and dancing the Reel of Tulloch with him over the body of one of her brothers whom he has just killed, the brother having pursued them to break up the dangerous liaison with an outlaw. jp • McLean, D. P. (1994–6) ‘The Reel of Tulloch in fact and fiction’, Trans. Gael. Soc. Inverness, vol. LIX, pp. 118–128. GRANT, Katherine Whyte, n. Whyte (K. W. G.),

born Oban 11 April 1845, died Oban 18 Aug. 1928. Writer and translator in Gaelic and English. Daughter of Mary MacIsaac, and Henry Whyte, schoolteacher and lay-missionary. In 1863, Katherine Whyte married William Grant, who died in 1866. Their only child, a daughter, died a year later. Securing a position as a lady’s travelling companion in Romania, she embraced the folklore and cultural diversity of Central Europe, recognising parallels with Gaelic oral tradition recalled from her childhood in Appin, Argyll. Returning home, she worked as an assistant and biblewoman for Lady Victoria Campbell (1854–1910), sister of *Lady Frances Balfour, in various female philanthropic initiatives in Inveraray, Tiree, Mull and Iona. Ambitious to become a writer, her first step in that direction was a Gaelic translation of Schiller’s Wilhelm Tell, working from the original German (Uilleam Tell, 1893). During eight years (1900–7) in South Africa, New Zealand and Australia, where she had siblings, she continued to write, sending home entries for literary competitions in Gaelic and English. Her particular interest was in writing Gaelic stories and plays for young people, drawing

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on traditional tales, but lack of funding thwarted her hopes that these could be published as colourful and affordable Gaelic books. Her pioneering Gaelic kinderspiel (a play for children with songs), Dùsgadh na Fèinne, was published in 1907, and Aig Tigh Na Beinne, a selection of her Gaelic writing and translations, in 1911. Her valuable knowledge of the traditional Gaelic lore of Argyll, learnt from her mother and grandmother, was published in Myth, Tradition and Story from Western Argyll (1925). She was awarded a Civil List Pension in 1914 in recognition of her Gaelic writing. PS • NLS Acc. 9736: Corr. with Malcolm MacFarlane. Grant, K. Whyte. Works as above, and see L. MacBean (1921) Celtic Who’s Who, pp. 52–3 (Bibl.). ‘Civil List Pension for Mrs K. W. Grant’, An Deo-Gréine, 9 (1913–14), p. 168; Balfour, Lady F. (1911) Lady Victoria Campbell: a memoir; Oban Times, 25 Aug. 1928 (obit.); ‘A Gaelic kinderspiel’, People’s Journal, 14 Dec. 1907; Scott, P. (2013) ‘With heart and voice ever devoted to the cause’: women in the Gaelic movement, 1886–1914’ PhD, Univ. of Edinburgh.

born Kilgraston, Perthshire, 16 March 1831, died London 20 Feb. 1908. Sculptor. Daughter of Lady Lucy Bruce, and John Grant, JP. Despite initial family opposition, Mary Grant’s traditional upper-middle-class education was followed by training with master sculptors in Florence, Paris and London. Having made her debut at the RSA (1864), she moved to London where she established an independent studio and exhibited at the RA from 1866 to 1882. Two passions dominated her career: ‘to make a mark on time’ and ‘to do something for the Glory of God in the way of art’ (Copeland 1995). Her statue Saint Margaret of Antioch satisfied both ambitions. At the urging of the Prince of Wales, she exhibited it at the Paris Exposition (1878) to resounding praise, and later presented it to her spiritual adviser, Bishop C. C. Grafton, for St Paul’s Cathedral, Fond-du-Lac, Wisconsin. Considered a ‘pioneer . . . amongst women’ by her nephew (DSAA p. 246), she also appears to have advocated female suffrage, being the putative author of The Franchise: an educational test (1878) and the sculptor of the Henry Fawcett Memorial (1886), subscribed to by his grateful countrywomen. Works survive at Kilgraston, in the SNPG (bust of Lord Advocate Henry Erskine), in St Giles’ (medallion of A. P. Stanley) and in St Mary’s (Episcopal) Cathedral, Edinburgh (Crucifixion). shh

GRANT, Mary,

• Royal Archives, Windsor Castle: Corr. Mary Grant, RA VIC/Add. T149 (access by gracious permission of Her Majesty The Queen); St Paul’s Cathedral Archive: Corr. Mary Grant, Journal of Bishop C. C. Grafton. Grant, M., Works as above, and (1885) ‘The Women’s Fawcett Memorial Fund’, Englishwoman’s Review, passim; (1899) ‘Miss Mary Grant’, Ladies’ Field, 15 July, pp. 248–9. Copeland, J. (1995) ‘ “A Mark on Time”: the diary and letterbook of Mary Grant, sculptor, 1830–1908‘, Diss. for Archb. Dipl. Readers, Lambeth, pp. 25, 63; Dictionary of Women Artists; DSAA; Hurtado, S. H. (2012) Genteel Mavericks: professional women sculptors in Victorian Britain; The Times, 29 Feb. 1908 (obit.). GRANT, Mary Pollock (May), born Partick 2 December 1876, died Tunbridge Wells, August 1957. Missionary, suffragette and policewoman. Daughter of Eliza Muirhead, and Rev. Dr Charles Martin Grant, Minister of St Mark’s, Dundee. May Grant attended Dundee High School, and worked as a Church of Scotland missionary in Scotland and from 1905 in India. As a militant suffragette and WSPU member in Dundee, she first came to public attention when she was imprisoned (using the alias Marion Pollock) following an attempt to disrupt a meeting with Lloyd George in Aberdeen Music Hall. After her release, she revealed her true identity as a clergyman’s daughter at a meeting in Dundee on 18 December 1912, where she called on her sisters to help their oppressed fellow women by fighting for political power. She maintained her high profile throughout 1913–14, writing regularly to the press and frequently being ejected from public meetings. She worked as a VAD nurse during the First World War, subsequently joining the women’s police service, first in munitions factories and then in London. She was involved in civil defence work during the Second World War. Mary Grant took an active interest in politics and was known as an excellent platform speaker. She was twice a Liberal candidate for English constituencies in Parliamentary elections. In the 1930s she became a Christian Scientist, and for 20 years was in practice as a healer, until disabled by a stroke in 1953. lo

• AGC ; Dundee Courier, 17 August 1957 (obit.); DWT; Leneman, L. (1992) ‘The Scottish churches and votes for women’, Records of the Scottish Church History Society, 24, p. 129.

n. Anderson, born Alloway 21 Feb. 1831, died Edinburgh 11 Feb. 1924. Fossil collector.

GRAY, Elizabeth,

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Daughter of Mary Hamilton Young, and Thomas Anderson, innkeeper, farmer. Second of eight children, after school in Girvan and Glasgow, Elizabeth Anderson became interested in the local fossils, thanks to her father, a keen naturalist. In 1856, she married Robert Gray, Glasgow banker and amateur ornithologist. Their joint interest in natural history focused on the Girvan fossils. Their four daughters and two sons helped collect specimens every summer holiday, even after their move to Edinburgh (1874). The original Gray Collection was presented to the Hunterian Museum, University of Glasgow, in 1866 and attendance at a newly instituted class in geology for women helped Elizabeth Gray to appreciate the scientific importance of her fossils. Her material formed the basis for many significant publications, notably Prof. C. Lapworth’s Girvan Succession (1882). He later stressed its importance as ‘the very first collection in which the exact localities and horizons of every individual fossil . . . [were] written down at the time of collection’ (letter to Mrs Gray, 10 June 1914, NHM) and in which the part and counterpart of each fossil were kept together. Elizabeth Gray collected on demand for several specialists, but her main concern was to have her specimens named, published with illustrations, and returned to her quickly. Widowed in 1887, she resolutely continued collecting, with her three unmarried daughters, until her death. Further collections were acquired by the RMS (1889), the BGS, the NHM (1920), and elsewhere. Her huge collections from the Lower Paleozoic around Girvan included unusual fossil groups and new species, several of which were named after her. For her substantial contribution to geology, she was made an honorary member of the GSG (1900) and awarded the Murchison Geological Fund (1903). jrr • NHM: Mrs Gray Archive (Corr.). Bull. BM (NH) (1989) 17, 2, pp. 167–258; Cleevely, R. J., Tripp, R. P. and Howells, Y. (1989) Mrs Elizabeth Gray (1831–1924) ; Creese, M. R. S. (1998) Ladies in the Laboratory; Horne, J. (1925) in Trans. Geol. Soc. Edin., 11, p. 392 (obit.); ODNB (2004); The Scotsman, 12 Feb. 1924 (obit.). GRAY, Elspet Jeans (Lady Rix), n. MacGregor-Gray,

born Inverness 12 April 1929, died London 18 Feb. 2013. Actor and charity campaigner. Daughter of Elspet Eleanor Morrison, civil servant, and James MacGregor-Gray, bank official.

Educated in India and England, a daughter of the Raj, Elspet Gray, one of the Saltire Society’s ‘Outstanding Women of Scotland’, cherished her Scottishness. After RADA, a 1947 Leeds and West End debut alongside Peggy Ashcroft and Robert Morley, and three films, she auditioned in 1949 for Brian [later Sir Brian] Rix (1924–2016), who claimed to have at once wanted to marry her. Initially reluctant, she embarked that year on a loving marriage which produced four children, the first, Shelley (1951–2005), having Down’s syndrome. The Rixes’ theatrical superstar life did not tempt them to accept advice to institutionalise Shelley. Gray’s rationality moderating Rix’s enthusiasms, they dedicated themselves to both acting and disability rights campaigning. The Scotsman summarised her acting as exuding ‘class, charm and an understated charisma’. Enjoying parts that, like her, took convention with a pinch of salty wit, often playing television cameos, her comedic delivery was exemplary. Charity roles included Mencap Vice-President and theatrical charity work. In 2004 she helped establish the University of East London’s Rix Centre for new media technology for learning-disabled people’s benefit. Earthy humour complemented social commitment. Presenting readings with Sylvia Sims, who demurred when she proposed some bawdy passages, Gray observed, ‘We’re feminists, dear, not frigid’. IB • Gray, E. (2004) ‘Bombay’, in L. Fleming (ed.) Last Children of the Raj, Vol 1, pp. 109­–11. The Guardian, 19 Feb. 2013, The Herald, 22 Feb. 2013, The Independent, 24 Feb. 2013, The Scotsman, 21 Feb. 2013 (obits). Personal knowledge.

born Helensburgh 16 June 1882, died Glasgow 27 May 1931. Artist. Daughter of Norah Neilson, and George William Gray, ­merchant. One of seven children, of whom one sister, Margaret, became a lecturer at the University of Glasgow, and another, Tina, a surgeon, in 1901 Norah Neilson Gray enrolled at GSA, graduating and joining the staff in 1906 to teach fashion design. She staged a solo exhibition in Glasgow in 1910. While serving as an orderly in the *Scottish Women’s Hospital at the Abbaye de Royaumont in 1918, she documented both staff and patients in paintings, one now in the IWM. After the war, she enjoyed an international reputation as an exhibitor, particularly in Paris (Bronze medal 1921, Silver 1923). Her talent was recognised

GRAY, Norah Neilson,

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in Scotland in 1921 when she became the first woman on the hanging committee of the RGI. Particularly gifted at depicting children, she showed the traditional Glasgow genius for design in portraiture, also ­producing book illustrations and watercolour landscapes (RSW 1914). Several works are owned by Glasgow Art Galleries. Her premature death put an end to a successful career in full flow. nji • Burkhauser, J. (ed.) (1990) Glasgow Girls, pp. 200–6; Crofton, E. (1997) The Women of Royaumont, p. 304 and cover; MSW; ODNB (2004) (see Glasgow Girls); Simpson, J. S. (1921) ‘Miss Norah Neilson Gray’, Scottish Country Life, March, pp. 100–1; Tanner, A. (1985) Norah Neilson Gray 1882–1931.

n. Cargill, born Hillhead, Glasgow, 13 August 1896, died Edinburgh 4 August 1979. Pioneer of Girl Guiding in Scotland. Daughter of Mary Grierson, and John Cargill, East India merchant. Allison Cargill provided the spark that ignited the Girl Guide Association in Scotland. Following the chance purchase of a 1908 instalment of Baden-Powell’s Scouting for Boys, she knew that its programme was what she wanted. ‘Why only for boys?’ she thought. With five friends from Laurel Bank School, Glasgow, she formed the Cuckoo Patrol, affiliated in 1909 to the 1st Glasgow Scout Group. In 1910, Guiding became ‘official’ and the Cuckoo Patrol became the Girl Guide Thistle Patrol. Allison Cargill went on to St James School, Malvern, where Guiding flourished with a strong Scottish connection. She later worked enthusiastically to introduce Guiding in Glasgow, and when the First World War intervened, used her experience to help raise the Glasgow Battalion of the WVR. After the war, the original spark became a blaze and as Division Commissioner, N. E. Glasgow, she enrolled 30 Guides at a time. In 1922, she married Dr Greenlees, headmaster of Loretto School, and they had a son and daughter. Alongside commitment to the school, she continued Guiding, latterly as Midlothian County Commissioner and chair of the Scottish Finance Committee, both for 23 years. In 1939, she received the Silver Fish, Guiding’s highest award, and in 1953 became President of the Council for Scotland. East Lothian’s Brownie House is named Allison Cargill House. sga

GREENLEES, Allison Hope,

• Archives of Girlguiding Scotland (SHQ, 16 Coates Crescent, Edinburgh).

GREENLEES, Georgina Mossman, m. Wylie, born Glasgow 13 May 1849, died London 6 Feb. 1932. Artist. Daughter of Ann Anderson, and Robert Greenlees, portrait painter. Georgina Greenlees was a prize-winning student at Glasgow School of Art, where she taught from 1874 until her resignation in 1881. She was the moving force behind the 1883 founding of the Glasgow Society of Lady Artists (GSLA) and became the Society’s first president. Known for her accomplished landscape paintings which frequently depicted touristic Scotland, particularly the areas around Loch Lomond to the north and Kilmacolm to the south, she also painted scenes of continental Europe and the south of England. After her resignation from the GSA, she taught art privately in her Glasgow studio and exhibited regularly with the Glasgow Institute of the Fine Arts as well as at other venues in Scotland and England. She married Graham Kinloch Wylie on 14 October 1885. In addition to her landscape pictures, she painted images of women such as her Itinerant Musician (1883), a rare portrayal of a female violinist, and genre scenes such as Favourite Air (1883). Georgina Greenlees and Helensburgh artist Lily Blatherwick (see Glasgow Girls) were the first two female members elected to the SSWCP when the Society formed in 1878. jvh

• Helland, J. (1997) ‘Locality and pleasure in landscape: a study of three nineteenth-century Scottish Watercolourists’, Rural History: Economy, Society, Culture, 8, 2, (2000) Professional Women Painters in Nineteenth-Century Scotland.

born Edinburgh 11 April 1898, died Edinburgh 17 April 1946. Medical missionary. Daughter of Helen Williamson, and Thomas Gregory, dental surgeon. After attending Brunstane School for Girls, Helen Gregory qualified at the University of Edinburgh Medical School (MBChB, 1921), then obtained a diploma from the London School of Tropical Medicine (1922). Becoming a medical missionary with the Baptist Missionary Society, she worked in its hospital in Berhampore for more than 17 years (latterly as assistant superintendent), and was awarded the Kaisar-i-Hind Medal. Returning to Edinburgh in 1941, she was unable to go back to India due to illness. On her death, she was described as possessing medical skill of a high order, and many accomplishments, with ‘a radiant charm of personality that drew the hearts of Indian and European alike with a magnetic power’ (Scottish Baptist Magazine 1946). A memorial Prayer Hall was erected to her at Berhampore GREGORY, Helen (Ella),

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Hospital. One sister, Andrina Gregory (1896–1966), qualified as a nurse from Edinburgh College of Domestic Science, and privately nursed Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Another, Margaret (Margot) Gregory ­(1904–52), a graduate of ECA, shared a flat with artists Edward and Valerie Gage and Archie Watt. She became Captain of the 19th Company Edinburgh Division, Girl Guides, then District Commissioner, Crewe Toll, and joined the Guide International Service Team involved in the postwar reconstruction of Germany, driving large army trucks. The wider Gregory family numbered some 36 doctors and dentists, all grandchildren of Hannah Steer and John Gregory, an Edinburgh silversmith. cbmg • Scottish Baptist Magazine, May 1946. Personal knowledge and family records.

admitted to the bar (1905). She worked for many years as a solicitor, retiring in 1942. Stella, their Australian-born sister (1889–1913), graduated LLB from the University of Melbourne in 1911, but died two years later from tuberculosis. ma • Royal Australasian Coll. Surgeons Archives: Records for Jane S. Greig and Janet L. Greig. ADB; Halonkin, L. ‘Greig, Flos (1880–1958)’ at www. womenaustralia.info/leaders/biogs/WLE0643b.htm in The Encyclopedia of Women and Leadership in Twentieth Century Australia; Kelly, F. (1982) ‘ “The woman question” in Melbourne, 1880–1914’, PhD, Monash Univ., Victoria; Kirk, D. and Twigg, K. (1994) ‘Regulating Australian Bodies: eugenics, anthropometrics and school medical inspection in Victoria, 1900–1940’, Hist. Edu. Rev., 23, 1; Neve, M. H. (1980) ‘This Mad Folly!’ Australia’s Pioneer Doctors.

born Cambusbarron, Stirlingshire, 24 Nov. 1903, died at sea 17 Sept. 1940. Documentary film-maker. Daughter of Jane Anthony, English teacher, and Robert Morrison Grierson, schoolmaster. Overshadowed by her more famous brother, John Grierson (1898–1972), the founder of British documentary film-making, Ruby Grierson was an influential figure in the early documentary movement. She was the second youngest of eight children in a politically conscious, intellectual family. Her mother had been a suffragette and was an active ILP member and Ruby inherited her passions and beliefs. There were lively family debates on all sorts of topics, in which social and political concerns were prominent. All the children attended the local school, where their father was headmaster, and she and all but one of her siblings went on to the University of Glasgow. Ruby Grierson’s strong political views and pacifism informed her work. She was a teacher before joining her brother at the Empire Marketing Board film unit, a government organisation, in the early 1930s. Her films dealt with the daily hardships of life and in They Also Serve (1940) she focused on the role of the housewife during the Second World War. She was both pugnacious and committed, reflected in the choice of subjects such as Housing Problems (1937) and Peace Film (1936), the latter the object of a bid by the authorities to have it banned. She had a reputation as a meticulous researcher. Documentary Newsletter said in 1937: ‘Her codirection of Today We Live established her as one of the few directors whose passion and sympathy was the life and spirit of ordinary people and she has formed the real main artery of documentary

GRIERSON, Ruby Isabel,

born Cupar, Fife, 12 June 1872, died Melbourne, Australia, 16 Sept. 1939, medical practitioner; GREIG, Janet Lindsay (Jenny), born Broughty Ferry 8 August 1874, died London 18 Oct. 1950, medical practitioner; GREIG, Clara Puella, m. Hack, born Broughty Ferry 23 Dec. 1877, died Brighton, Victoria, 9 June 1957, tutor; GREIG, Flos, born Broughty Ferry 7 Nov. 1880, died Moorabbin, Victoria, 31 Dec. 1958, barrister and solicitor. Daughters of Jane Stocks Macfarlane, and Robert Lindsay Greig, merchant. This remarkable group of sisters emigrated to Victoria in 1889 with their parents. Jane and Janet studied medicine at the University of Melbourne, both graduating MB, BS by 1896, when they were among the founders of the Queen Victoria Hospital, the first women’s hospital in Victoria. Jane was on the honorary medical staff until 1910, Janet for 52 years, until 1948. In 1910, Jane Greig was the first woman to receive the Diploma of Public Health from the University of Melbourne and was appointed MO to the Victorian Education Department, becoming Chief MO in 1929 and retiring in 1937. Janet was a consulting physician in Collins Street for more than 30 years. The first woman anaesthetist in Victoria, she was admitted to the Royal Australasian College of Physicians in 1940; the pathology building at the Queen Victoria Hospital is named after her. Clara entered the University of Melbourne and began a BSc, but left in 1901 to open a tutorial college for university students. In 1910, she married C. A. Hack, patent attorney. Flos was the first woman in Australia to enter a law faculty at the University of Melbourne (1897), the first to graduate LLB (1903) and to be GREIG, Jane (or Jean) Stocks,

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progress’. Housing Problems was noted for the spontaneity and honesty of its interviews, influencing subsequent work. In her documentary The Zoo and You (1938) she had the original notion of filming from the perspective of the animals. She died in action. She was commissioned by the Canadian government to make a film on the evacuation of children to Canada and when the liner The City of Benares was torpedoed in mid-Atlantic she was among those lost. A flamboyant figure in her wide trousers, frequently holding a long cigarette holder as she manoeuvred her cameras, she was remembered for her ‘good humour, her fierce enthusiasms and her physical and spiritual energies’ (Hardy 1979, p. 113). Kirsty Wark, whose company made a 1994 BBC Scotland documentary on her work, believes that ‘modern film-makers have a lot to learn from Ruby Grierson’s simplicity and clarity’. Her sister Marion Anthony Grierson, m. Taylor (1907–98) was also a film-maker with EMB, and editor of the periodical World Film News 1936–8, before she turned to social work in Edinburgh. She said that Ruby Grierson believed that films could change the world. rm • Ellis, J. C. (2000) John Grierson: life, contributions, influence ; Glasgow Herald, 8 Nov. 1994; Hardy, F. (1979) John Grierson: a documentary biography; The Scotsman, 3 Nov. 1994; Ex-S: re-shooting history, broadcast, BBC1, Nov. 1994. Private information.

n. Skea [‘Countrywoman’], born Shapinsay, Orkney, 28 June 1923, died Shapinsay, Orkney, 19 May 1996. Writer. Daughter of Margaret Skethaway, postmistress, and John Skea, crofter and poet. The elder of two sisters, born and brought up on the family farm of Ostoft, Shapinsay, Bessie Skea attended school on the island of Shapinsay and from the age of nine wrote ‘bits and pieces’ of poetry and prose (Orcadian 1996, p. 5). In 1942, she married James Grieve and they had three children. After a short time living in Rousay and Birsay, the family settled in Harray. In March 1958, Bessie Grieve’s work was first published in The Orkney Herald under the byline ‘Countrywoman’. Her personal thoughts and descriptions of contemporary country life in the islands, with specific reference to natural history and the antics of her cats, were juxtaposed and intermingled with memories of her childhood. After the cessation of that newspaper, her work was published in The Orcadian from 1961 until her death. Several published works included her column, short stories, poetry and anecdotes.

GRIEVE, Jemima Bessie,

Her perceptive and poetic writing style ensures that she will be remembered as a writer of great clarity and one of Orkney’s foremost literary figures, alongside her friends George Mackay Brown and Ernest Marwick. sjg • Grieve, J. B. (1962) A Countrywoman’s Calendar, (1964) Waves and Tangles, (1983) A Countrywoman’s Diary, (1993) Island Journeys, A Countrywoman’s Travels, (1958–61) ‘Countrywoman’, in The Orkney Herald, (1961–96) ‘Countrywoman’s Diary’, in The Orcadian. The Orcadian, 23 May 1996 (obit.). Private information (family members)

OBE, born Ayr 11 April 1906, died Berkhamsted 19 Feb. 1998. Journalist, Editor of Woman magazine. Daughter of Annie Stark, nurse, and Robert Grieve, fundholder. Mary Grieve, the second of three children, spent much of her childhood in bed through illness and was educated at home. Aged 16, she briefly attended school in Glasgow before training as a secretary and studying journalism in London. She returned to Glasgow to work on Scottish Home and Country, the magazine of the SWRI, and as a social reporter on the popular daily, The Bulletin. In 1935, she published, under the pseudonym ‘Mary Lyon’, her only work of fiction, Without Alphonse: the diary of a Frenchwoman in Scotland. In 1936, she returned to London to work on the recently established monthly magazine Mother. Its publisher, Odhams, launched the weekly, Woman, in 1937. After a disastrous start, the editorial team from Mother was brought in to save the situation and Mary Grieve became associate editor of Woman. When the male editor left to join the RAF in 1940, she was made editor and remained in that post for the rest of her working life. Mary Grieve advised the Ministry of Information on women’s role in wartime, and ensured that Woman responded constantly to women’s concerns, from rationing through postwar austerity to the consumer-oriented 1960s. Using the new colour photogravure process, the magazine became enormously popular and influential, its circulation peaking at almost 3.5 million in 1957. She introduced a letters page, the ‘Evelyn Home’ agony column, and a consumer advice department backed by practical testing. She became a member of the Council for Industrial Design (1952–60), the National Council for Diplomas in Art and Design (from 1960) and the council of the Royal College of Art (from 1963). On her retirement in 1962, she was made OBE for ­services

GRIEVE, Mary Margaret, [Mary Lyon],

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to journalism. She had inspired a generation of woman journalists including Ruby Turberville (1922–2003), features writer with the Press and Journal in her native Aberdeen before becoming women’s editor of the Aberdeen Evening Express in the 1960s. Ruby Turberville championed a range of women’s issues, loved to meet her readers, and carried her enthusiasm into a subsidiary career as a public speaker. In her retirement, Mary Grieve published her autobiography, Millions Made My Story (1964). She edited textbooks aimed at preparing girls for life after school and, with a friend, ran a business, Dove Delicacies, making paté and supplying it to local shops and restaurants, until her activity was curtailed by a severe stroke in 1978. marb

Laura Grimond Award in her memory, for completed or restored buildings blending well with their surroundings. ‘In her determination to help others . . . and put their welfare above her own, she was rather like one of the noblest and finest characters in Scottish literature’ (Howie Firth, funeral tribute, ibid., p. 89). Laura and Jo Grimond were given the Freedom of Orkney in August 1987. hek • Anderson, J., Foulkes, B., Tait, C., Williams, R. & Wallace, R. (eds) (2000) Jo and Laura Grimond: a selection of memories and photographs 1945–1994; Barberis, P. (2005) Liberal Lion: Jo Grimon – a political life; ODNB (2004) (Grimond, Joseph). Personal information.

• Grieve, M., and Lyon, M., Works as above. Knight, A. (2003) ‘Ruby Turberville’ Scottish PEN Newsletter 26 (obit.); ODNB (2004); The Times, 26 Feb. 1998 (obit.). GRIMOND, Laura Miranda, n. Bonham Carter, born London 13 Oct. 1918, died Orkney 15 Feb. 1994. Councillor and Liberal Party activist. Daughter of Lady Violet Bonham-Carter, n. Asquith, and Sir Maurice Bonham Carter. Laura Bonham Carter came from one of the most prominent political families in the British Isles. Her grandfather, Herbert Asquith, was Prime Minister 1908–16, both parents were politically active and ‘she grew up in a household that sparkled with ideas and intellect’ (Anderson et al. 2000, p. 86). Educated at home in London, she spent time in Paris and Vienna before her debutante season. In 1938, she married Jo Grimond (1913–93), leader of the UK Liberal party 1956–67. They had four children. The family moved to Orkney in 1951 after Jo Grimond was elected MP for Orkney. Although she was active within the Liberal Party at a national level, most of Laura Grimond’s political work was undertaken locally in Orkney (Girl Guides, Woman’s Guild, Mental Health Association). In 1974, she was elected Councillor for Firth and Harray and served until 1980, chairing the Housing Committee for part of that time. She was held in high regard and built up warm relationships with the Orkney people. With her feeling for landscape and buildings, she was central to the establishment of local conservation organisations flourishing today: the Orkney Heritage Society, Blide Trust, Hoy Trust and Sanday Development Trust. She believed that conservation was beneficial for everyone living in the area, not just for posterity. The Orkney Heritage Society established the

GRUOCH, Queen of Scotland (Lady Macbeth), fl. early–mid 11th century. Although her reputation as Lady Macbeth is anachronistic, Gruoch is one of the most famous women of medieval Scotland, yet little is known of her. A grand-daughter of Cináed (Kenneth) II or III, she married Gillacomgain, mormaer of Moray (d. 1032) and, after his death, his cousin Macbeth, King of Scots 1040–57. Since Macbeth may have slain Gillacomgain, this marriage might represent an attempt to end the internecine strife within the Cenél Loairn. Gruoch’s son by Gillacomgain, Lulach, briefly succeeded Macbeth in the kingship in 1057–8. During Macbeth’s reign, Gruoch and her husband jointly granted land to the Culdees of Loch Leven; in this document, Gruoch is styled ‘daughter of Bodhe . . . queen of Scots’ (Lawrie 1905, no. 5). This reference may be indicative of her status and influence within the kingdom of Scots. ram

• Aitchison, N. (1999) Macbeth: man and myth; Anderson, A. O. (ed.) (1922) Early Sources of Scottish History ad 500 to 1286; Cowan, E. J. (1993) ‘The historical MacBeth’, in W. D. H. Sellar (ed.) Moray: province and people ; Lawrie, A. C. (ed.) (1905) Early Scottish Charters Prior to ad 1153; Hudson, B. T. (1994) Kings of Celtic Scotland; WoM. GUNN, Isabel,

n. Fubister, born Tankerness, Orkney, 1 August 1781, died Stromness 7 Nov. 1861. Hudson’s Bay Company labourer, cross-dresser. Daughter of Girzal Allan, and John Fubister. Isabel Fubister entered the exclusively male employment of the Hudson’s Bay Company (HBC) under the alias ‘John Fubister’. She sailed for Hudson Bay on the Prince of Wales in 1806, her true identity known only to John Scarth of the Orkney parish of Firth, an experienced hand with the HBC. She was posted as a labourer to Fort

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Albany on the west coast of James Bay and worked with Scarth in the brigade of boats, making regular trips with trade goods up the Albany River and returning with furs. In the summer of 1807 she was sent with a brigade on the long and difficult route up the Albany to Lake Winnipeg and then south up the Red River to the HBC post at Pembina, a distance of more than 1,500 miles. John Scarth was not on the trip. On 29 December 1807, at the fur-trading post of the North West Company trader Alexander Henry, ‘John Fubister’ was taken ill and requested permission to remain in the house. Henry was startled to find ‘Fubister’ in labour and shortly after delivered of a son, the first white child born in the North West. Isabel (now calling herself Gunn) returned to Fort Albany the following June, where she was employed as a washerwoman until she could be sent back to Stromness in October, 1809. John Scarth is registered as the child’s father. She lived as a pauper in Stromness with her son James until her death in 1861. A version of her story is told in the novel Isobel Gunn by Audrey Thomas (1999). gh

*Lady Charlotte Bury. Twice a Duchess, Elizabeth Gunning was mother to the 7th and 8th Dukes of Hamilton and the 6th and 7th Dukes of Argyll. In 1761, she became Lady of the Bedchamber to Queen Charlotte. Following Argyll’s death, she was made peeress in her own right as Baroness Hamilton of Hameldon. During the Wilkes Riots in London in 1768, she bravely refused to ‘illuminate’ the windows of Argyll House in support of the rioters, despite intimidation. As mother of the Duke of Hamilton, from 1761 to 1769 she was involved in prosecuting the ‘Douglas Cause’. She claimed that her son was rightful heir to the childless 1st Duke of Douglas as there was considerable doubt about the true identity of his nephew, Archibald, born when his mother *Lady Jane Douglas was 50. Lady Jane’s son eventually won the right to inherit the Douglas estates over the Hamilton children. (He married Lady Frances Scott, see *Douglas, Lady Frances.) When Johnson and Boswell visited Inveraray Castle in 1773, Elizabeth Gunning cold-shouldered Boswell, a lawyer for the victorious Douglas side. sn • Boswell, J. (1936) Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides; Hicks, C. (2001) Improper Pursuits: the scandalous life of Lady Di Beauclerk; ODNB (2004) (see Campbell, Elizabeth (Bibl.)).

• Skaill Papers, Kirkwall Library. Bolus, M. (1971) ‘The son of I. Gunn’, Beaver, 302 (Bibl.); Coues, E. (ed.) (1897) New Light on the Early History of the Greater Northwest . . . 1799–1814; Gough, B. (ed.) (1988) The Journal of Alexander Henry the Younger, 1799–1814; ODNB (2004). GUNNING, Elizabeth, Duchess of Hamilton, Duchess of Argyll,‡ born near Huntingdon, Dec. 1733, died

GUTHRIE, Helen,

London 20 Dec. 1790, buried Kilmun, Argyllshire. Leader of society. Daughter of Bridget Bourke, daughter of Viscount Mayo, and John Gunning of Castlecoote. Daughter of an impoverished Irish gentleman, Elizabeth Gunning was a leading figure in Scottish aristocratic society and the London court. Elizabeth Gunning and her sister Maria arrived in London in 1750. Both great beauties, and painted by fashionable portrait artists and engraved for the popular market, they were the ‘pin-ups’ of the age. The two sisters made spectacular marriages. Elizabeth married James, 6th Duke of Hamilton (1724–58), in 1752 and had three children. After James’s death, a marriage in 1759 to John Campbell, Marquis of Lorne (1723–1806), heir to the Duke of Argyll, produced five children, including the author

born 1574. Presbyterian petitioner. Daughter of an Aberdeen saddler. In June 1592, 18-year-old Helen Guthrie approached James VI as he was going hunting. She handed him a letter of complaint and, kneeling, lambasted him for being a bad Christian. It was not unusual for Scots to approach the monarch personally, but James was taken aback by her zeal. In her letter she asked James to repent and prevent ‘the sinnes raigning in the countrie, swearing, filthie speeking, profanatioun of the Sabbath’. James apparently swore at her, asking if she was a prophetess. She replied that ‘she was a poore simple servant of God’ (Calderwood 1844, p. 169). She was then sent to *Anna of Denmark, who received her more kindly. Helen Guthrie’s actions were prompted by Presbyterian concerns that the royal households were not godly enough; her supporters knew that the King always listened to kneeling female petitioners. mmm

• Calderwood, D. (1844) The History of the Kirk of Scotland, vol. v, T. Thomson, ed.; Cameron, A. I. (ed.) (1932) The Warrender Papers, ii, pp. 170–4.

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born Lochenhead, Dunscore, Dumfriesshire, 6 June 1897, died Auschwitz 17 July 1944. Missionary. Daughter of Jane Mathison, and Thomas Haining, farmer. Jane Haining was brought up in a deeply religious home in rural Dumfriesshire and this early influence, together with the practical housekeeping skills learned of necessity after the death of her mother, may have prepared the ground for her future calling as a Church of Scotland missionary. Academically able, she attended Dumfries Academy and then worked as a secretary for the thread manufacturers, J. & P. Coats, in Paisley. Her life outside work revolved around her church, the United Free Church, Queen’s Park West in Pollockshields. After hearing a talk on missionary work among Eastern European Jews, she declared to a friend, ‘I have found my life’s work’ (McDougall 1998, p.13). This conviction sustained her over four years of training and waiting for a suitable opportunity. It came in 1932 with her appointment as matron to the Jewish Mission Girls’ Home in Budapest. Having learned Hungarian, she won the trust of her young charges, many of whom came from difficult backgrounds and broken families. Life was fulfilling for her, as she coped calmly with frequent domestic crises, but she became aware of increasing hostility towards Jews in Hungary and rising fear among her charges. She was on home leave when war was declared and she arranged to return immediately to Hungary. With the worsening situation, all staff were recalled, but she remained at her post despite repeated cables from Edinburgh. ‘If these children need me in days of sunshine, how much more do they need me in days of darkness?’, she wrote (McDougall 1998, p.24). The mission became a refuge and she was in grave danger by early 1944 when the Germans occupied Hungary. Denounced and arrested by the Gestapo, her care for her Jewish charges was enough to send her, in April 1944, by cattle truck to Auschwitz. Although passed fit for work and not gassed on arrival, by July she was dead. In 1997, she was posthumously recognised at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem as Righteous Amongst the Nations, the only Scot to be so honoured. In 2010, a main riverside road (‘Jane Haining rakpart’) was named after her in Budapest, where a documentary film was

produced (2014). She has also been honoured in the Budapest Holocaust Memorial Centre (2017), and a heritage centre in her name was opened in Dunscore in January 2018. at • NLS: Jane Haining, papers, including will, and photographs (discovered 2016 in World Mission Council archive, Church of Scotland Edinburgh office). McDougall, D. [1949] Jane Haining, (1998) amended and reprinted, I. Alexander, ed., for the Church of Scotland Board of World Mission; ODNB (2004). HALDANE, Elizabeth Sanderson, CH, born Edinburgh 27 May 1862, died Auchterarder 24 Dec. 1937. Social reformer, political activist and writer. Daughter of Mary Burdon-Sanderson, and Robert Haldane, WS. Born into a well-established Perthshire family, Elizabeth Haldane was brought up in an atmosphere of religious and social commitment. The only daughter, she was educated by tutors alongside her brothers until her early teens, when she attended classes for girls in Edinburgh. When her father died in 1877, she became her mother’s companion, and after Mary Haldane (1825–1925) died, she wrote of ‘that dreadful feeling of unwantedness when one has been necessary for so many years . . .’ (LSE: Markham/25/36, letter to Violet Markham, 25 May 1925). Her energy found an outlet in Liberal politics, shared with her oldest brother, Richard Haldane, and in her work on housing in Edinburgh, which came about through a meeting with philanthropist Octavia Hill in London. She became a member of the Edinburgh Social Union, founded in 1885 by Patrick Geddes and *Mary Maclagan, and by 1897 was acting as its housing manager, directing a supportive but disciplined environment for tenants in properties such as White Horse Close in the Old Town. She was also a member of its Industrial Law Committee from 1903 and remained involved until 1930, when she became Honorary President. The family spent summers at Cloan, in Perthshire. Needing something to occupy her spare time there, with Frances H. Simson she began a three-volume translation of Hegel’s History of Philosophy, published in 1892, the first of her twelve publications. Writing on Victorian women writers, nursing and Scotland’s history and

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gardens followed. While at Cloan she founded the Auchterarder Institute and Library, of which she remained secretary for fifty-three years, supported financially by her neighbour, Andrew Carnegie. She became the first woman trustee of the Carnegie UK Trust in December 1913. She was convinced of the importance of education and was elected first to the local School Board and then to the County Education Committee. Judging from her diaries, she found politics engrossing. She campaigned for her brother Richard Haldane from his first election in 1884, often speaking at women’s meetings. She had ‘advanced views’ on women’s rights from an early age and was a supporter of suffrage, ‘though hating militancy’ (Haldane 1937, pp. 55, 271) and working through the WLF. She was close to and influenced her niece, *Naomi Mitchison. Richard Haldane never married and when in London, Elizabeth acted as his hostess. He trusted her with his private views and, on occasion, with the sight of ‘secret papers’ (NLS: MS 20240, diary 23 February 1912). He became a member of the government in 1906, so Elizabeth met and discussed political and philosophical questions with all the leading politicians of the day. The respect in which her views were held is apparent from her correspondence, her giving evidence to the Poor Law Commission in 1907 on the position of women in Scotland, and her appointment to the Royal Commission on the Civil Service in 1912. In 1911, she was among the first women to receive an LLD from the University of St Andrews. Her interest in nursing, fostered by her membership of the board of management of the Edinburgh Infirmary, led to her extensive contribution to proposals by the Local Government Board on nurse training, and to a significant role in setting up nursing services for time of war attached to the Territorial Army. She was made Companion of Honour in 1917, and in 1920 she became the first Scottish woman JP. In the 1920s, Elizabeth Haldane and her brother drew nearer to Labour, and their circle of friends, which had for many years included Beatrice and Sidney Webb, was now extended to Labour politicians. Richard Haldane became a member of the 1924 Labour Government. After his death in 1928, Elizabeth Haldane continued her wide-ranging activities and also travelled extensively, visiting Egypt in 1934 and Persia in 1936. JA • NLS: MSS 6010–6068, corr., MSS 20240–20244, diaries; LSE: Markham 25/26, corr. with Violet Markham.

Haldane, E. Works as above, and (1937) From One Century to Another. Alberti, J. (1990) ‘Inside out: Elizabeth Haldane as a women’s suffrage survivor in the 1920s and 1930s’, Women’s Studies International Forum 13, pp. 117–23; Burbidge, V. (2014), ‘Sympathy, synthesis and energy: Patrick Geddes and the Edinburgh Social Union’, in W. Stephen (ed.) Learning from the Lasses: Women of the Patrick Geddes Circle; Mitchison, N. (1973) Small Talk, (1975) All Change Here, (1979) You May Well Ask; Morris, R. J. (2013) ‘White Horse Close: philanthropy, Scottish historical imagination and the re-building of Edinburgh in the late nineteenth century’, Journal of Scottish Historical Studies, 33, 1, pp. 101–28; ODNB (2004).

born probably Dirleton Castle c. 1500, died probably Dunglass c. 1563. Daughter of Margaret Douglas of Pumpherston, and Patrick, Lord Haliburton. Marion Haliburton’s marriage to George, 4th Lord Home, c. 1518, brought a third of the lucrative Dirleton (East Lothian) estates into Home ownership. Supporters of the Franco-Scottish alliance throughout the 1540s, the Homes paid a heavy price for their loyalty, as their goods were all destroyed by the end of 1545. When Lord Home was injured and the Master of Home captured around the time of the Battle of Pinkie (1547), Lady Home was compelled to give some assurance to England’s Protector Somerset. Being pragmatic, she wrote to Somerset that ‘I dare not let my lord my husband see your last writing about the rendering of Home [Castle] and the pledges’. (L&P. Henry VIII, p.501). This is perhaps why the strategically important castle capitulated with ease in 1547, though it was recaptured by Franco-Scottish forces in 1548. Lady Home quickly reverted to the Scottish side, giving good intelligence to *Mary of Guise. Her treachery, committed to protect her family, was never ­discovered. mmm HALIBURTON, Marion (Mariot), Lady Home,

• Bain, J. (ed.) (1898) Calendar of the State Papers relating to Scotland, i, p. 36; Cameron, A. L. (ed.) (1927) The Scottish Correspondence of Mary of Lorraine, pp. 280–1, 291–2, 295–7; Gairdnar, J. and Brodie, R. H. (eds) (1907) Letters and Papers, foreign and domestic, of the reign of Henry VIII, xx, pt 2; Meikle, M. M. (2004) A British Frontier? Lairds and Gentlemen of the Eastern Borders, 1540–1603; *ODNB (2004) (Hume, George); RMS, iii, 1480, 1764; SP, iv, pp. 377, 460. HALKETT, Anne, Lady

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see MURRAY, Anne (1623–99)

HAMILTON

n. Sillars, born c. 1794, died Edinburgh 22 Oct. 1870. ‘Female Reformer’, itinerant lecturer and phrenologist. Daughter of Jane Macdougal, and Archibald Sillars, shipmaster. Mentioned in 1832 as a public lecturer, by 1836 Mrs Hamilton of Paisley, the wife of Edward Hamilton, a Paisley woollen weaver, was being described as ‘a phenomenon in politics’ (Leeds Times, 1838). She lectured on religious liberty as a right, on women’s right to an education which promoted gender equality, and on phrenology as the basis for a scientific understanding of the appropriate education and training for the young. By the 1840s her public radicalism had been largely replaced by an emphasis on professionalism. She developed a technique of ‘practical phrenology’ (York Herald, 30 Dec. 1843), examining individuals’ heads in public meetings and in paid private sessions. Exceedingly shrewd, with ‘an agreeable, pawky manner’ (Morning Advertiser, 1870), Agnes Hamilton’s lectures were amusing, interesting and informative. Initially touring towns and villages in Scotland, she extended her lectures and head examinations to England and Ireland, her visits to each locality lasting from a few days to several months, depending on her reception. At one point she claimed to have analysed the heads of over 60,000 people in the previous fifteen years. Although later mainly based in Edinburgh, increasing poverty forced her to continue her talks and phrenological analysis of character into her seventies. Press reviews varied greatly, but many were complimentary, with conflicting reports as to whether theoretical phrenologists, such as George Combe and Dr Andrew Combe from Edinburgh, approved or objected to her activities. LRM

HAMILTON, Agnes,

• Cooter, R. J. (1978) The Cultural Meaning of Popular Science: phrenology and the organization of consent in nineteenth century Britain; HHGW; Falkirk Herald, 29 Sept. 1859; Leeds Times, 5 May 1838; Morning Advertiser, 28 Oct. 1870 (obit.); Perthshire Courier, 4 Oct. 1832; The Scotsman, 3 Sept. 1834; Stirling Observer, 9 June 1859; York Herald, 9, 16, 30 Dec. 1843. HAMILTON, Anne, 3rd Duchess of Hamilton suo jure, born Whitehall Palace, London 16 Jan. 1632, died Hamilton Palace 17 Oct. 1716. Daughter of Lady Mary Feilding, and James Hamilton, 3rd Marquis and later 1st Duke of Hamilton. Anne Hamilton’s mother, one of Queen Henrietta Maria’s ladies of the bedchamber, died in 1638 after giving birth to six children in five years. Her eldest child had already died and the others

were all said to be delicate, so their father, Charles I’s leading Scottish adviser, moved them from Whitehall to the healthier air of Chelsea. Even so, only Anne and her younger sister, Susanna, survived. Their lives were further disrupted by the outbreak of civil war, and the Duke, fearing for the future and believing that the family needed a man at its head in such troubled times, drew up a will leaving all his titles and estates to his younger brother William, Earl of Lanark. He sent Anne to be brought up at Hamilton Palace by his own mother, Anna Cunningham, 2nd Marchioness of Hamilton, while Susanna remained in London with the children’s other grandmother, Susan, Countess of Denbigh. For the next five years, Anne watched her elderly grandmother run the vast Hamilton estates. The Marchioness died in 1647 and in 1649 Anne’s father was executed by the Cromwellians. Her uncle became 2nd Duke of Hamilton, but in 1651 was fatally wounded at the battle of Worcester. In accordance with his will Anne became 3rd Duchess of Hamilton in her own right. She was 19 years old, and in theory Scotland’s greatest heiress, but all her estates had been confiscated, her father and uncle had contracted enormous debts and her kinsman the Earl of Abercorn claimed that everything was rightfully his, on the grounds that the family titles were entailed on the male line. In fact, Anne’s uncle had broken the entail, but the lawsuit dragged on for years. Her situation seemed desperate, and for a time she had to take refuge in a small house near Hamilton Palace. On 29 April 1656, Anne married William Douglas, Earl of Selkirk (1634–94). This love-match was surprising, for he came from a well-known Roman Catholic family and Anne’s father had stipulated that she must marry a Protestant. Gradually, they managed to pay the fines allowing them to reclaim the estates. At the Restoration, Charles II gave Duchess Anne the £25,000 sterling his father had owed hers, creating her husband Duke of Hamilton for life, at her request. While raising seven sons and six daughters including *Margaret Hamilton, Countess of Panmure and *Katherine Hamilton, Duchess of Atholl, the couple embarked on an ambitious rebuilding programme at Hamilton Palace, laying out extensive gardens and improving their estates. The Duke died in 1694 but the Duchess persevered with their plans. She rebuilt Hamilton burgh school and schoolhouse, provided a large new almshouse in the town, and established a 184

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woollen manufactory and a spinning school. She introduced coal mining, a salt pan and a ferry boat on her island of Arran, sending an ambulatory preacher there. She gave silver communion cups to the churches on her estates and was strongly supportive of the Presbyterian church. Although she insisted that she was above party politics, she did donate money to the Darien Scheme and opposed the Union of the Parliaments of 1707. Dying at the age of 84, she was buried in Hamilton Parish Church and was long remembered in the west of Scotland as ‘Good Duchess Anne’. rkm • Lennoxlove, The Hamilton Archives; NRS: The Hamilton Muniments, GD406. Marshall, R. K. (2000) The Days of Duchess Anne (Bibl.); *ODNB (2004). HAMILTON, Elizabeth, born Belfast 25 July 1758, died Harrogate 23 July 1816. Novelist, educationalist, moral philosopher. Daughter of Katherine Mackay of Dublin, and Charles Hamilton, Scottish merchant in Belfast. The youngest of three children, whose father died a year after her birth, Elizabeth Hamilton was sent in 1762 to live with her Scottish uncle and aunt near Stirling. She was educated from the age of 13 mainly by her aunt who, though sympathetic, once advised her ‘to avoid any display of superior knowledge’ (Benger 1818, I, p. 50). In 1785, a contribution she sent to Henry Mackenzie’s Lounger was accepted, followed by others. Her brother Charles, an orientalist, returned from India, encouraged her ambitions and ‘taught her to explore her own talents’ (ibid., p. 109). She joined him in London and was introduced into literary and political circles before his death in March 1792. His inspiration was evident in her Translation of the Letters of a Hindoo Rajah (1796), which mocked the follies of British society through the eyes of an Indian visitor. She wrote in an anti-Jacobin spirit against the ideas of the French Revolution, yet with a progressive concern to improve women’s education and other aspects of her own society. The same ambiguity is present in her Memoirs of Modern Philosophers (1800), which more directly and comically satirised radical ideas, but also supported Mary Wollstonecraft’s educational views and female philanthropy. In her Letters on the Elementary Principles of Education (1801–2, I, p. vii) (her major interest), Elizabeth Hamilton suggested to women readers that any approach to the subject without

‘some knowledge of the principles of the human mind, must be labour lost’. She acknowledged the influence of Dugald Stewart, Professor of Moral Philosophy at the University of Edinburgh. With his encouragement, she moved to Edinburgh in 1804 and, with *Eliza Fletcher, played an active role in literary society there, holding her own successful Monday morning levees. It was probably Eliza Fletcher who described her as ‘correcting the vulgar prejudices against literary women’ and as ‘giving a new direction to the pursuits of her own sex’ through her philanthropic interests (Benger 1818, I, p. 179). Her Memoirs of Agrippina (1804) was a semi-fictional didactic biography, less successful than The Cottagers of Glenburnie (1808), which drew on her Perthshire upbringing to relate humorously the cleansing and civilising of the McClarty family. Having been governess to the daughters of Lord Lucan (1804–5), Elizabeth Hamilton published Letters Addressed to the Daughters of a Nobleman (1806). In the mis-titled Series of Popular Essays (1813) she wrote again on the powers of the mind. Her own distinctive addition to these was the propensity to magnify the idea of self, which could foster the ambition forged by the spirit of party. She further suggested that the sexes could be considered as two parties, a concept which led her to a surprisingly radical analysis of masculine power. She looked forward to the spread of education in a morally progressive society. She also wrote Scots poetry, including the once popular ‘My ain fireside’ and the cheerful ‘Is that Auld Age that’s tirling at the pin?’. She did not marry but lived mainly in her later years with her widowed sister, Katherine Blake. jr • Hamilton, E., Works as above, and see Bibl. below. Benger, Miss [E. Ogilvy] (1818) Memoirs of the late Mrs Elizabeth Hamilton. With a selection from her correspondence and other unpublished writings (2 vols); Grogan, C. (2012) Politics and Genre in the Works of Elizabeth Hamilton, 1765– 1816 (Bibl.); ODNB (2004); Perkins, P. (2010) Women Writers and the Edinburgh Enlightenment; Tytler, S. [Henrietta Keddie] and Watson, J. L. (1871) The Songstresses of Scotland, vol. 1, pp. 291–328. HAMILTON, Helen, n. Elliot,

MBE, born Edinburgh 20 Jan. 1927, died Perth 12 Jan. 2013. Table tennis player. Daughter of Alice May Slight Virtue, and Alexander Elliot, labourer. Helen Elliot was 16 when she first played table tennis, and became the first Scot to win a major world table tennis title. As of 2017, she remains the

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only table tennis inductee into the Scottish Sports Hall of Fame. Her career started in Edinburgh at Dalry First Aid Post, then she moved on to Murrayfield, and later established a long association with the Gambit Club. She won two world titles; world championship medals in three consecutive years (1952–5); singles championship titles in Ireland, Wales, England, Belgium, Germany and Scotland; the English Open title (1949, 1950, 1958) and the Scottish Open, first in 1946 then for 13 consecutive years. Helen Elliot married Robert Dykes, cashier, in 1948, was widowed in 1961, then married again in 1963 to Charles Hamilton, a teacher. Helen Hamilton spent many years developing table tennis in Scotland, also serving in national and international organisations. She coached at summer table tennis camps throughout the UK, served as Honorary President of the Scottish Table Tennis Association, and was nominated President of the Commonwealth Table Tennis Federation in 1997 and 2005. GJ • Perthshire Advertiser, 15 Jan. 2013, The Scotsman, 17 Jan. 2013 (obits); Scottish Sports Hall of Fame www.sshf.co.uk/ inductees/g-k/helen-elliot-hamilton HAMILTON Janet, n. Thomson, born Carshill, Lanarkshire, 14 Oct. 1795, died Langloan, Lanarkshire, 30 Oct. 1873. Poet, spinner. Daughter of Mary Brownlee, embroidress, and James Thomson, shoemaker. When Janet Thomson was about two years old, the family moved to Hamilton and, when she was seven, to Langloan, where her parents were farm workers on the Drumpellier estate. She worked from the age of seven, recalling her experience in Rhymes and Recollections of a Handloom Weaver (1844). She spun yarn for sale and, later, worked at the tambour-frame. Self-taught, she read widely in the village library, including Paradise Lost, the works of Allan Ramsay, Fergusson, Burns, Pitscottie’s historical work, and Plutarch’s Lives. In 1809, she married John Hamilton (1783/4–1878), a shoemaker. They had ten children, three of whom died in her lifetime. She continued her self-education, reading Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine and the works of Shakespeare while she nursed the children; she taught all her children to read and to spell. She began to write in 1849. From 1855, she was blind; her son James transcribed her work, and read it back to her so that she could make corrections. Her works include Poems and Essays (1863),

Poems of Purpose and Sketches in Prose (1865) and Poems and Ballads (1868). A wide scope of interest is evident in her work, from local to national and international affairs. Often, her sympathies focus on women workers. ‘A Lay of the Tambour Frame’ expresses sympathy for those who were ‘slave in all but the name’ and did not have a union; she demands a fund to aid ‘sisters in need’. ‘Oor Location’, while primarily a temperance poem (a frequent theme), is an eloquent expression of 19th-century industrial life, with ‘A hunner funnels bleezin’, reekin”, written in articulate Scots. She capably defends the language in ‘A Plea for the Doric’. She does not, however, criticise the British status quo. She admired British royalty, as is evident in ‘Lines. Suggested by Seeing the Train Containing the Queen and Suite pass through Coatbridge . . . 1862’. Equally, her deeply felt Christian belief, expressed in, for example, ‘The Fruits of the Spirit’, suggests that she thought faith compensated for weariness in this life. Even so, she hated exploitation. Her essay, ‘Reminiscences of the Radical Time 1810–20’, expresses a dislike for ‘would-be insurgents’ but implies a great deal of sympathy for those who lacked the ‘privileges’ of ‘paternal and enlightened government’. ‘Freedom for Italy 1867’ expresses her admiration for Garibaldi, and demands action: ‘Slaves of the Papacy! when will ye know/ That, to be free, yourselves must strike the blow?’. Janet Hamilton is summed up by George EyreTodd inThe Glasgow Poets as ‘one of those remarkable women in humble life of whom Scotland has produced so strong a crop’ (1906, pp. 226–7, quoted HSWW, p. 255). vb • Monklands Library Services (1984) Janet Hamilton: selected works. Hamilton, J., Works as above, and see HSWW (Bibl.). Bold, V. (2007) James Hogg: a bard of nature’s making; Boos, F. S. (2008) Working-Class Women Poets in Victorian Britain: an anthology (Bibl.); Finlay, W. ‘Reclaiming local literature: William Thom and Janet Hamilton’, in D. Gifford (ed.) (1988) The History of Scottish Literature, vol. 3; ECSWW; HSWW (Bibl.); ODNB (2004); Wright, J. (1889) Janet Hamilton and other Papers; Young, J. (1877) Pictures in Prose and Verse, or, Personal Recollections of the Late Janet Hamilton. HAMILTON, Katherine, Lady Murray and Duchess of Atholl, born Hamilton 24 Oct. 1662, died

Hamilton 10 Jan. 1707. Political actor, religious writer. Daughter of *Anne Hamilton, 3rd Duchess of Hamilton, and William Douglas, Earl of Selkirk and later 3rd Duke of Hamilton. 186

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Katherine Hamilton was educated at home, learning to read, write and keep accounts. Serious and reserved, she was extremely eligible. In 1683 she married Lord John Murray (1660–1722), Duke of Atholl from 1703, a surprising match given her staunch Presbyterianism and his Episcopalian background. They were devoted and had 13 children. Lord Murray had financial problems; constant quarrelling over finances strained their relationship with his parents. Lady Murray provided her husband with much of his political intelligence. In 1702 she participated in elections in Perth, attempting to have her brother-in-law elected. She worked hard to defend, direct and support the family interest, opposing the Union of 1707 and supporting the Darien venture. Atholl was a difficult, proud man and her correspondence reveals her role as peacemaker. Katherine Hamilton was part of an important network which included her two sisters, *Margaret, countess of Panmure and Susan, countess of Dundonald, and the Jacobite *Margaret, Lady Nairne. The families were close and the women’s correspondence stresses the importance of female networks within noble families. Extremely pious, she kept a religious journal, often expressing her desire to devote herself to her faith. She died suddenly just before the Union was ratified. Atholl’s non-attendance in parliament has been attributed to bribery but it was his shock and grief that removed him from public life. NMC

(1667–1737) had dancing lessons and tutors for singing and learning the harpsichord. With their mother and sister, *Katherine Hamilton, Duchess of Atholl, they formed important networks, connecting some of Scotland’s most important Scottish families. Margaret Hamilton married James Maule 4th Earl of Panmure (1657/8–1723) in 1687. A committed Jacobite, the Earl participated in the 1715 rising, was wounded at Sheriffmuir and subsequently fled to France. The Countess remained in Scotland, campaigning to secure her jointure, protect the family estates and persuade her husband to meet the preconditions necessary for his remission. She displayed great determination and succeeded with parliament over her jointure; although the estates were sold, they were leased back to the family in 1724. Lady Panmure wintered in Edinburgh and is credited with organising new assemblies there. She and other noblewomen were known as the Lady Directoresses and presided over these social events; she informed her husband that ‘Auld Reekie (Edinburgh) will grow polite with the rest of the world’ (NRS, GD45/14/220/145). He refused to cooperate in her attempts to gain his remission but she continued to pursue this until his death in France in 1723. NMC

• Blair Castle Archive, Atholl Muniments; NRS: GD406 The Hamilton Muniments. Cowmeadow, N. (2013) ‘“Your politick self-designing sister” – Scottish Noblewomen’s Electioneering in 1702’, in Young, J. R. (ed.) Parliaments, Estates and Representation 33:1, pp. 1–19, (2014) ‘“In sum what have I don for God or my Soule this day?”: The Religious Writing of Katherine, first Duchess of Atholl’, Journal of Scottish Historical Studies 34:1, pp. 1–19; Marshall, R. K. (2000) The Days of Duchess Anne; ODNB (2004). HAMILTON, Margaret, Countess of Panmure, born Hamilton, Dec. 1668, died Edinburgh, Dec. 1731. Estate manager, Lady Directoress. Daughter of *Anne, 3rd Duchess of Hamilton, and William Douglas, Earl of Selkirk and later 3rd Duke of Hamilton. Margaret Hamilton was educated at home. Like her sisters she learned to keep accounts and she studied Latin. She was keen on painting and wrote poetry. She and her elder sister, Lady Susan Hamilton, later Countess of Dundonald

• NRS: GD406 Hamilton Muniments; GD45 Dalhousie Papers. Marshall, R. K. (2000) The Days of Duchess Anne; Marshall, R. K. (1983) Virgins and Viragos; von den Steinen, K. (1999) ‘In search of the antecedents of women’s political activism’, in E. Ewan and M. Meikle (eds) Women in Scotland c. 1100–c. 1750. HAMILTON, Lady Mary

(1736–1821)

see WALKER, Lady Mary

HAMILTON, Mary Agnes (Molly), n. Adamson, CBE, born Manchester 8 July 1882, died London 10 Feb. 1966. Writer, broadcaster and politician. Daughter of Margaret Duncan, schoolteacher, and Robert Adamson, university professor. Molly Adamson’s father was Professor of Logic at Owen’s College, Manchester, 1876–93. He later took up posts in Aberdeen and Glasgow. The eldest of six children, Molly was educated mainly at Glasgow High School for Girls. She inherited her parents’ academic abilities as well as their radicalism and feminism. From 1901, she spent three years at Newnham College, Cambridge, specialising in economics and gaining first-class honours. She

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moved to Cardiff to assist the Professor of History at the University College of South Wales, leaving in September 1905 to marry a colleague, Charles Hamilton. Molly Hamilton had published several books, on history and fiction, by 1913, when the couple separated. Thereafter, she pursued a successful career in journalism. Initially a radical Liberal, her pacifist commitment led her to join the ILP in 1914 and she became assistant editor of the ILP’s New Leader during the mid-1920s. Her main political influences were Ramsay MacDonald and Norman Angell, the latter dedicated to building up the League of Nations from 1919. In 1929 she was returned as MP for Blackburn. She championed equal pay and the removal of marriage bars for women in professions such as teaching. Women’s employment rights were a lifelong interest. She also served as parliamentary private secretary to Clement Attlee, and was appointed delegate to the League of Nations. She would certainly have progressed further within Parliament had she not been defeated at Blackburn in the 1931 General Election. Her socialism hardened as a result of the unemployment crisis and Ramsay MacDonald’s decision to join with the Conservatives to form the National Government. Remaining politically active after 1931, and committed to the League of Nations, she was a vocal critic of appeasement. During the 1930s, her pacifism turned into dedicated antifascism and ultimately support for war against Germany. Meantime, she continued to make her living from writing and broadcasting. Her output was eclectic, ranging from novels to political biographies, notably her acclaimed 1938 study of Arthur Henderson (Foreign Secretary 1929–31), a close friend. An able and effective speaker, she appeared regularly on radio and served on the BBC’s Board of Governors from 1932 to 1936. After three years as an alderman on the LCC, she was a civil servant between 1940 and 1952, working on government information and propaganda. She was made CBE in 1949. Up to her death Molly Hamilton continued to be a prolific writer and in 1944 and 1953 published two autobiographical volumes, Remembering My Good Friends (1944) and Uphill All the Way (1953). iem • Hamilton, M., Works as above. BDBF(2); DLabB, vol. 5 (Bibl.); Harrison, B. (1986) ‘Women in a men’s house: the women MPs, 1919–1945’, Historical Journal, 29; ODNB (2004).

n. Wilson, CBE, born New Abbey, Dumfries, 8 Feb. 1868, died Edinburgh 14 April 1938. Teacher, women’s welfare and employment campaigner. Daughter of Jane Ewing Brown, and the Rev. James Stewart Wilson. Jane Wilson was educated at St Leonards School, St Andrews, where she was captain of games and head of school, and at Girton College, Cambridge, where she passed the Classical Tripos in 1889. From 1890 to 1899 she taught Classics and German at St Leonards. She resigned her teaching post on her marriage in 1899 to Robert Kerr Hannay (1867–1940), historian, and their only child was born the following year. In 1911, the Hannays moved to Edinburgh. There Jane Hannay became publicly prominent during the First World War when, despite the initial doubts of the authorities, she was involved in the organisation of voluntary women’s patrols (the forerunners of women police) and was honorary secretary of a training school for policewomen and patrols established in Glasgow. In 1918, she was elected to the first executive committee of the EWCA. She was a JP, and member of a number of public bodies, including the Edinburgh Local Employment Committee (set up in 1916 to assist the Home Office and Board of Trade), two trade boards, a Ministry of Labour committee (on the supply of female domestic servants and the effect of the unemployment insurance scheme), and the Central Committee on Training and Employment of Women. She was vice-chairman of the Scottish equivalent of CCTEW at her death. In 1920 she was appointed (with *Elizabeth Sanderson Haldane) a member of the Scottish Savings Committee set up by the Treasury, and for this work she was awarded the CBE in 1933. Jane Hannay was also an active member of the Church of Scotland. She served on the Women’s Association for Foreign Missions Committee from 1915 and was elected to the influential General Assembly Home Mission Committee in 1930, the first year when women were admitted. She was seen by contemporaries as a pioneer worker for women’s welfare. lrm

HANNAY, Jane Ewing,

• NRS: GD333/7/1 and GD333/7/21 (EWCA papers); St Leonards School Archives (Minutes and reports). Church of Scotland, Reports on the Schemes of the Church of Scotland with legislative Acts passed by the General Assembly, 1914, passim; Evening News, 15 April 1938 (obit.); Ford, P. and Ford, G. (eds) (1951) A Breviate of Parliamentary Papers, 1917–1939; *ODNB (2004); SB; St Leonards School Gazette,

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HARDIE June 1938, p. 2 (obit.); The Scotsman, 27 August 1919, and ‘The late Mrs Hannay’, 19 April 1938. Private information.

n. Allan, born Edinburgh 25 Feb. 1776, died 1837. Diarist. Daughter of Margaret Learmonth, and Robert Allan, banker and proprietor of the Caledonian Mercury. The Allan family lived at 28 Queen Street in Edinburgh’s New Town, and their social set included the notable Edinburgh families of the day. Jessy Allan was interested in art and her friends included the artist Alexander Nasmyth, and his talented painter daughters, *Jane Nasmyth and her sisters. When Jessy Allan’s elder sister, Agnes Ranken, left Scotland for India with her military husband, Jessy began a detailed journal of her daily life to keep Agnes up-to-date with family affairs. Covering 1801–11, with contributions from other relatives including her father, the 32 small volumes constitute a unique record of early-19th-century New Town society. In 1803, Jessy Allan married John Harden (1772–1847), a talented amateur artist. Their early married life was spent in Queen Street, then they moved to Brathay Hall near Windermere, where they were part of the literary social circle that included the Wordsworths. To complement his wife’s journal, John Harden undertook a series of delightful drawings of domestic and family life in Edinburgh and the Lake District. Both drawings and journal are housed in the National Library of Scotland. sn

HARDEN, Janet (Jessy),

• NLS: MSS 8832–63, Jessy Harden’s Journal; MSS 8866–8, John Harden’s Drawings. Brown, I. G. (1995) Elegance and Entertainment in the New Town of Edinburgh.

n. Pettigrew, born Glasgow 6 Sept. 1874, died London 24 March 1951. Labour MP for Glasgow Springburn, 1937–45. Daughter of Margaret Drummond, and John Pettigrew, Poorhouse Assistant Governor. Details of her early life and education are unknown but in her teens Agnes Pettigrew was employed as a shop assistant. In c. 1893, she helped organise Scottish shoe workers and went on to become the first female organiser of the shop assistants’ union. An ILP member, in 1907 she became a platform speaker gifted ‘in unfolding practical Socialism to women taking up politics for the first time’ (Haddow 1920, p. 63). In c. 1909, she was elected to Glasgow School Board and became the

HARDIE, Agnes,

first female member of Glasgow Trades Council. In 1909 she married George Hardie, half brother of Keir Hardie and later Labour MP for Glasgow Springburn, with whom she had a son. She was a pacifist and linked with the Women’s Peace Crusade during the First World War; in the Second World War, she opposed the introduction of conscription for men in 1939 and women in 1941. In 1919, she was appointed as Women’s Organiser for the Labour Party in Scotland, a post that she held until 1923 when she moved to London with her newly elected husband. On his death in 1937, she replaced him as MP for Glasgow Springburn. Elected at the age of 63, she retired in 1945. Although hardly a typical housewife herself, she became known as the ‘housewife’s MP’ on account of her voluble attacks on the price of meat or shortage of potatoes (Vallance 1979, p. 85). Her selection as Labour candidate for Springburn was attributed to her marital connections but in her own life she pioneered a path for women as a political organiser and elected representative. cb • DLabB, vol. 13 (Bibl.); Glasgow Herald, 31 March 1951 (obit.); Haddow, W. M. (1920) Socialism in Scotland: its rise and progress; ODNB (2004); Vallance, E. (1979) Women in the House, A Study of Women Members of Parliament ; SLL. HARDIE, Margaret (‘Midside Maggie’), n. Lylestoun, born c. 1625 Westruther, Berwickshire, died after 1660. Tenant farmer. In 1643, Margaret Lylestoun married Thomas Hardie, who farmed the Midside part of Tollishill Farm, part of the estates of the Earl of Lauderdale. Seven years of bad weather followed. The local story has it that when the rent was due, Thomas Hardie was ready to give up and seek work elsewhere. However, his young wife went to beg an interview to see whether the Earl would let the rent ‘stand over’. At Thirlstane Castle, she was given a hearing by the reluctant Earl. She told of the lean years and the deep snowdrifts on the Midside of Tollishill. The Earl told her to bring a snowball on Midsummer’s Day and he would forego his rent. Thomas and Maggie Hardie collected a large amount of snow in a deep cleuch on the hill and were able to produce the promised snowball on Midsummer’s Day. For once, the Earl kept his word. Thereafter, the Hardies prospered. The Earl, a staunch loyalist, was captured at the Battle of Worcester and confined in the Tower of London for nine years. His tenants in Lauderdale saw no reason to pay rent to a rebel landlord,

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except for those at the Midside of Tollishill. Here, Maggie Hardie put aside the rent money in gold coins which she baked into a bannock and set off on foot to London. She gained access to the Tower and presented the Earl with the bannock. On breaking it, gold coins fell to the floor. With these, he obtained his freedom and on the Restoration of Charles II, returned to Lauderdale where he presented Maggie Hardie with a silver girdle (now in the National Museum of Scotland, Edinburgh). He gave Maggie and Tom Hardie their farm rent-free for the remainder of their days. we • NRS: Lauderdale Estate Records 1643–1700. Lang, J. (1913) North and South of the Tweed.

n. Mactavish, born Edinburgh 1813, died Sault Ste Marie, Upper Canada, Sept. 1854. Northern pioneer. Daughter of Letitia Lockhart, and Dugald Mactavish, sheriff of Argyllshire. The eldest of nine children, grandchildren of Lachlan, Chief of Clan Tavish, Letitia Mactavish grew up at Kilchrist House, near Campbeltown, and completed her education at a ladies’ finishingschool. She married James Hargrave in January 1840 and they sailed to Canada later that year. Her husband was a chief trader in charge of York Factory, at that time the Hudson’s Bay Company’s most northern supply post, on the bleak and barren shores of Hudson Bay. She was the first European wife to go with her husband to such an isolated post and she spent altogether ten years in a place of ‘solitude, swamps, infernal fried suckers and salt geese’ (Macleod, 1947, p. cvi), giving birth there to five children, and surviving scurvy and the epidemics of measles which sometimes decimated the native population. The letters written to her family in Scotland give a vivid picture of life at an isolated fur-trade post. gh

HARGRAVE, Letitia,

• Macleod, M. A. (ed.) (1947) The Letters of Letitia Hargrave. Morgan, C. (2017) Travellers through Empire: indigenous voyages from early Canada; Van Kirk, S. (1980) ‘Many Tender Ties’: women in fur-trade society, 1670–1870; Venema, K. (2005) ’Letitia Mactavish Hargrave and Hudson’s Bay Company domestic politics: negotiating kinship in letters from the Canadian Northwest’ in J. Blair et al. (eds) ReCalling Early Canada: reading the political in literary and cultural ­production.

born Fearn, Angus, 7 April 1815, died Edinburgh 16 Jan. 1891; HARRIS, Jane, born Fearn 18 Jan. 1823, died Edinburgh 2 Sept. 1897. Singers and preservers of traditional songs.

Daughters of Grace Dow, and David Harris, ­minister. Amelia and Jane Harris spent most of their lives together, living finally in the Morningside district of Edinburgh. Norval Clyne, an Aberdeen lawyer who met them in 1873, remarked about Amelia Harris in a letter of 27 August: ‘She is personally an exceedingly pleasant lady, with means apparently sufficient to enable her to live comfortably and ramble here and there, as she and her sister have just been doing’ (Lyle et al. 2002, p. xxvi). In Lerwick, they heard an inspiring lecture by William Edmonstoune Aytoun, Professor of Rhetoric and Belles Lettres at the University of Edinburgh; it gave their lives the focus that enabled them to leave their heritage of song to posterity. They sent him the words and music of their ballads and songs in 1859, and later, when the Aytoun materials had been lost sight of, they prepared another manuscript for Francis James Child of Harvard University, Amelia Harris writing the words and Jane Harris the music. Their songs had come down to them from their mother, who had learnt them by the age of ten from a nurse called Jannie Scott. The tradition of passing songs down through the female line, sung in the home, is a familiar one, but for the first time in Scotland these women, recognising the cultural value of what they knew, took steps themselves to make the songs available to the world at large. Previously, women’s songs had been taken down by collectors, one notable case earlier in the century being Mary Storie, n. Macqueen (born c. 1801, emigrated to Canada 1828), who was the wife of William Storie, a weaver at Lochwinnoch in Renfrewshire, and belonged to a traveller family. Her parents were Elizabeth Copeland and Osburn Macqueen. In 1827, she sang for Andrew Crawfurd and Andrew Blaikie a repertoire of 47 songs, including a number that came to her from her mother, her grandmother and her great-grandmother. ebl • Child, F. J. (ed.) (1882–98) The English and Scottish Popular Ballads; Lyle, E. (ed.) (1975, 1996) Andrew Crawfurd’s Collection of Ballads and Songs; Lyle, E., McAlpine, K. and McLucas, A. D. (eds) (2002) The Song Repertoire of Amelia and Jane Harris. Audio sources: Mary Macqueen’s Ballads sung by Jo Miller, STS 01; Katherine Campbell, The Songs of Amelia and Jane Harris (2004) SPRCD 1041.

HARRIS, Amelia,

HARRISON, Margaret, n. Burnett, born Dumbarton 5 May 1918, died Castle Douglas 15 April 2015. Christian peace campaigner and CND activist.

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Daughter of Margaret McIntyre Colquhoun, and John George Burnett, iron moulder. Margaret Burnett attended Dumbarton Academy, then worked as a tracer in Denny’s shipyard. In 1945, she married Bobby Harrison (d. 2006). Settling in Dumbarton, where he ran a cycle shop, they had two daughters. Both the Harrisons took part in CND demonstrations from the 1950s onwards, and Margaret joined the 1960s protests against Polaris at Holy Loch. In 1982, together with Bobby, she founded Faslane Peace Camp at the Clyde Naval Base on the Gareloch, to protest against the siting there of Trident missiles. The couple supported its activities over many years – Margaret was arrested 14 times, and police at Molesworth and Greenham Common ended up on first-name terms with her. She spent at least one night in the cells and was ejected from the House of Commons for the cause in 1991. A lifelong Episcopalian, Margaret Harrison was a woman of simple Christian convictions, with a vision of a world without war. She was widely appreciated for her hospitable friendship and fun and was active with the Iona Community in pilgrimages for peace and practical efforts for social justice. She and her husband were awarded the Freedom of Dumbarton, along with her sister Bee, for their peace work. Moving to Castle Douglas, in her last years she continued to be a lively and entertaining presence. JF e • Harrison, R. and M. (2010) Bobby and Margaret. Dumbarton Reporter, 1 May 2015, The Scotsman, 22 April 2015, The Telegraph, 22 April 2015 (obits). HART, Constance Mary (Judith), n. Ridehalgh, Baroness Hart of South Lanark, DBE, born

Burnley, Lancs, 18 Sept. 1924, died London 8 Dec. 1991. Socialist, Labour MP. Daughter of Lily Lord, schoolteacher, and Harry Ridehalgh, linotype operator. Judith Ridehalgh was brought up in Wharley and educated at Clitheroe Royal Grammar School and the LSE, where she took a first in sociology in 1945. As a teenager she adopted the name Judith. Her marriage in 1946 to scientist Anthony Hart (1917–99) produced two sons, Richard and Steven. Her family, she frequently acknowledged, provided both political and personal support. She was a lifelong socialist and member of the ‘hard left’ of the Parliamentary Labour Party, with a strong power base in the NEC. As such, she consistently opposed party policy despite being a member of government or of the shadow cabinet for most of her career.

She fought, unsuccessfully, Bournemouth West in 1951 and South Aberdeen in 1955. In 1959, a landslide year for Macmillan’s Conservative Party, Judith Hart, an Englishwoman in a traditional area of Scotland, took the Tory-held seat of Lanark, latterly Clydesdale. She held it for nearly 30 years, until she retired from the Commons in 1987. For some years in the early 1980s, she was the sole Scottish woman MP. Her constituency straddled the grim Lanarkshire coalfield and she worked indefatigably, always elegantly dressed and coiffed, against pit closures and to ameliorate their effects. Described by Barbara Castle in her obituary (Guardian 1991) as dynamic, physically attractive, courageous and challenging, she campaigned for nationalisation, public-sector job-creation and school pupils with disabilities, and against the EEC, the sale of arms to Chile, and the Falklands war. She took a firm line against Ian Smith and arranged scholarships for black Rhodesians to study in Britain. It was largely due to her efforts that the tawse was outlawed in Scottish schools. Judith Hart was Paymaster General in Harold Wilson’s cabinet from 1968 to 1969, but it is for her determined work as Minister for Overseas Development (1969–70, 1974–5, 1977–9) that she is most remembered, her name known and respected in remote corners of the least developed countries. She articulated, long before it became fashionable, the connection between the economic and fiscal policies and actions of the First World and the condition of the Third. Judith Hart was instrumental in achieving the Lomé Convention (1975). She spoke at the first Aldermaston march in 1958 and was a moving force in the World Disarmament Campaign. Her work was recognised in numerous ways, including the Chilean Order of Merit for her support in the struggle against Pinochet. The South African security services attempted to smear her and British Intelligence took some interest. In 1979, to the consternation of many friends, she became a Dame of the British Empire (DBE). In 1988, she was made a life peer and was active in the Lords until prevented from continuing by symptoms of the cancer from which she died. Donald Dewar memorialised Judith Hart as an influential figure in Scottish politics who devoted her life to fighting poverty both in the UK and in the developing world (Scotsman 1991). lh • Labour History Archive, People’s History Museum, Manchester: Judith Hart Papers; Glasgow City Archives: constituency papers.

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HART Hart, J. (1968) Minorities in our Society, Address to National Council of Social Service, (1973) Aid and Liberation, (1975) Administering an Aid Programme in a Year of Change: a personal diary/address to the Royal Commonwealth Society, (1977) New Perspectives in North-South Relations: a radical view of world poverty and development, (1978) Interdependence, (1979) The Rights of Man: Sir David Owen memorial lecture (NLS). Castle, B., The Guardian, 9 Dec. 1991 (obit.); Dewar, D., The Scotsman, 9 Dec. 1991 (obit.); Rosen, G. (2001) Dictionary of Labour Biography; Hansard, 9 Dec. 1991; ODNB (2004); Who’s Who of Women in World Politics (1991). Private information: Keith Harwood, Clitheroe Royal Grammar School; Tony Benn. Personal knowledge. HART, Jennifer Marianne (Maidie),‡

n. Bridge, born Brookfield, Renfrewshire, 15 Dec. 1916, died Edinburgh 7 Nov. 1997. Campaigner for equality, development and peace. Daughter of Jennifer Gibson, and Norman Cressy Bridge, consultant electrical engineer. Maidie Bridge was educated at St Columba’s school, Kilmacolm, and the University of St Andrews, where she graduated with first-class honours in English. She married William Douglas (Bill) Hart in 1941. They had two daughters, Constance and Jennifer. From early days in the playgroup movement, through work with the Church of Scotland – she was President of the Woman’s Guild in the 1970s – to ecumenical involvement with the World Council of Churches (WCC), she followed her belief that women, too, are made in the image of God. After attending the WCC Vienna conference on human rights in 1982, she became a founder member of the Ecumenical Forum of European Christian Women. She also served as a Vice-President of the British Council of Churches (BCC) 1978–81, and of Scottish Churches Council (SCC) 1982–6. As an Executive member of the UK Women’s National Commission (the independent advisory group to the UK Government on women’s issues) she chaired the Steering Committee for the UN International Women’s Year 1975 events in Scotland. Out of these joint activities came the foundation of the Scottish Convention of Women (SCOW) in 1977, linking traditional organisations, women’s movement groups and individual women in work on equality issues. SCOW’s work was carried forward after 1992 by bodies including the Scottish Joint Action Group, Women’s Forum Scotland, Engender, the Network of Ecumenical Women in Scotland (NEWS) and the now government-supported Scottish Women’s Convention.

Maidie Hart was a quiet revolutionary, determined that women’s voices should be heard in decision making and their experience acknowledged and valued. She worked to bring a gender perspective to international conferences, to the Church of Scotland, particularly in her work with former Moderator Bill Johnston on the Community of Women and Men in Church and Society, and to devolution for Scotland (SCOW was a member of the Scottish Constitutional Convention). At a women’s workshop, on a peace march or talking to government ministers (she was never intimidated by high office), her gift was to bring people together. A committed Christian, she was an Elder of the Church of Scotland from 1974, serving in Edinburgh and Dirleton, East Lothian. A memorial adapted from an original work designed by the late Tim Stead commemorates her in Dirleton parish church. kmd /ah • NLS: SCOW Archive. Hart, M. and Davies, K. (1990) ‘The Scottish Convention of Women’, in S. Henderson and A. Mackay (eds) Grit and Diamonds: Women in Scotland making history. Blackie, N. (ed.) (2005) A Time for Trumpets: Scottish church movers and shakers in the twentieth century; Breitenbach, E. and Mackay, F. (eds) (1998) Women and Contemporary Scottish Politics ; Glasgow Herald, 15 November 1997 (obit.); Life & Work, Jan. 1998 (obit.); The Scotsman, 21 Nov. 1997 (obit.). Private information. HARTSIDE, Margaret, fl.1590s–1619. Chamberer to *Anna of Denmark. Margaret Hartside’s royal service ended in 1607 when she and her husband, John Buchanan, sergeant of the king’s buttery, returned to Scotland, but her subsequent arrest for allegedly stealing jewels worth £400 from Anna, her trial at Linlithgow on 31 May 1608, and her curious punishment, provide fascinating insights into the dangers of indiscretion in high places. Depositions suggest the charge was a pretext to silence various indiscreet speeches she had made about the sovereigns. The charge was reduced from theft to ‘detaining’ the jewels. By king’s warrant of 20 July 1608, she was declared Infamous, required to repay the jewels’ value to Anna, and exiled for life to Orkney. Her husband shared her fate for complicity, although his partial liberty was restored in 1611. Shortly after Anna’s death in March 1619, the king lifted Margaret Hartside’s doom and restored her liberty. hp

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HAY • NRS: Treasurer’s Accounts, E21/75. Fraser, W. (1889) Memorials of the Earls of Haddington; Crim. Trials, vol. 2; RPC, vols 8, 11. HASTIE, Annie Harper, n. Williamson, born Carriden, Bo’ness, 13 Feb. 1922, died Falkirk 18 Sept. 2002. Baker, active in local community. Daughter of Annie Martin, domestic servant, and David Williamson, blacksmith. Annie Williamson attended Carriden Primary School and Bo’ness Academy, where discipline was strict, with the belt in frequent use. Leaving school in 1937, she played acoustic guitar in a band, ‘The Georgians’, with her brother and sister, while working in domestic service and as a doctor’s receptionist. During the Second World War, she travelled to ‘secret’ munitions work in London and Scotland. She commented, ‘We weren’t supposed to know it was Dumfries, but we all kent!’, reflecting that the experience gave young women a sense of identity and broader horizons. But her world mostly pivoted around the community of Bo’ness. After a stint at Paton and Baldwin’s, in 1949 she married local baker William Hastie. She worked in the shop and kept accounts until the bakery closed in 1988, while raising three sons, including twins. She is widely remembered for her local activities, which included the Townswomen’s Guild, the Red Cross, the WRVS, the Churchwomen’s Guild, and the SWRI. Always reliable, she helped with charity events and catering, carrying Christmas parcels to the ‘old dears’ on foot at an advanced age, and was a fixture at the Rotary Club, the local theatre, and the golf club. Through a Rotary exchange programme, she befriended a Dutch girl, who called Annie Hastie her ‘Scottish mum’. She engendered much local affection through her activities and genuine kindness: people came on to the street to pay respects as the family returned from her funeral. Annie Hastie would have said she was just an ordinary woman doing what needed to be done, but she represents all those small-town women who, through their energy, keep many a community running. dls

• Hastie, A. Manuscript notes about Bo’ness. Interviews with Annie Hastie, family and friends. HATTON, G. Noel

see CAIRD, Alice Mona (1854–1932)

HAWARDEN, Clementina, Viscountess, n. Elphinstone Fleeming, m. Maude, born

Cumbernauld House, 1 June 1822, died London 19 Jan. 1865. Photographer. Daughter of Catalina

Alessandro of Spain, and Admiral Charles Elphinstone Fleeming, C.-in-C. Gibraltar, Governor of Greenwich Hospital, MP for Stirlingshire. After a traditional private education in fine arts and languages, in 1845 Clementina Elphinstone Fleeming married Cornwallis Maude, Lifeguards officer and heir to an Irish peerage (Hawarden), to which he succeeded in 1856. They had eight surviving children. Life on the Dundrum estate in Co. Tipperary enabled her to begin a photographic career, unusual in the 1850s, early years in the development of photography. At least partly self-taught, she produced 850 photographs, almost exclusively in wet collodion negative-albumen print technique. Initially using a stereoscopic camera, she created studies of the Tipperary landscape, in which her family and household often were placed. She collaborated with the artist Sir Francis Seymour Haden and he produced etchings from her photographs. The work for which she is most familiar, however, derived from after 1859 when the family moved to a house in South Kensington, ideally suited for photography. Lady Hawarden used light-flooded first-floor rooms to capture costume portraits and amateur theatrical tableaux featuring her daughters. This period coincided with the development of the South Kensington Museum; the Hawardens belonged to the influential arts people of that milieu. Lady Hawarden presented her photographs at the 1863 and 1864 exhibitions of the Photographic Society of London, was awarded silver medals and elected to the Society. Her work was admired and bought by Charles Lutwidge Dodgson (Lewis Carroll). She was a supporter of women artists and of the Female School of Art, in aid of which she sold photographs. She was planning to help establish the United Association of Photography when her death from pneumonia at 42 put an untimely end to a flourishing career. She ranks with Julia Margaret Cameron among the few Victorian women photo­ graphers to achieve excellence and recognition. ls • Dodier, V. (1999) Clementina, Lady Hawarden; Lawson, J. (1997) Women in White ; ODNB (2004); Ovenden, G. (ed.) (1974) Clementina, Lady Hawarden.

born Montrose, 14 Jan. 1867, died Arbroath, 27 April 1955. Artist. Daughter of Elizabeth Middleton Ross, and William Hay, bank accountant, farmer. A student of Arts and Crafts under John Duncan at Patrick Geddes’s ‘Old Edinburgh HAY, Helen Ann,

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School of Art’ (c. 1893–7), Helen Hay produced ­illustrations for Geddes & Colleagues publications The Evergreen (Spring 1895) and Lyra Celtica (1898). She painted friezes for the Edinburgh Room, Outlook Tower, Castle Hill, from designs by artists including James Cadenhead. She produced paintings for Dr Fletcher and Rev. Millar Patrick while working as Secretary of the School (c. 1898–1901). In a George Street studio, ‘Designer and Decorator’ (1901), she also advertised as an ‘Art Metal Worker’ (1903–12). She published Some Verses and The Little Boy Book (1900), designed a booklet of Burns’ poems (1912), published a verse anthology of poems about Edinburgh (1920), and may have exhibited watercolours with the RSA (1930s and 1940s) as well as silversmithing. ra • NLS: MSS 10589–90 Geddes papers; Strathclyde Univ. Archives: Geddes papers and issues of The Evergreen (1895–98). Gordon Bowe, N. and Cumming, E. (1998) The Arts and Crafts Movements in Dublin and Edinburgh 1880–1925. HAY, Helen (Eleanor, Helenor), Countess of Linlithgow, born before 1570, died Cumbernauld,

1627. Royal tutor, death-bed convert to Protestantism. Daughter of Jean Hay, and Andrew Hay, 8th Earl of Erroll. When most of the Scottish nobility had become Protestant, Helen Hay remained openly and defiantly Roman Catholic. Her connection with James VI’s court is first recorded after she married a Protestant, Lord Alexander Livingston (d. 1621), later first Earl of Linlithgow, in January 1584. In 1594, Alexander carried the towel at the christening of Prince Henry. James VI placed his two daughters in the care of the Livingstons from 1596 until 1603; Princess Margaret died young, but *Elizabeth (see Stewart, Elizabeth, Queen of Bohemia) lived with them long enough for them to be responsible for her early education. Helen and Alexander had five children. As early as 1587, the ministers of the reformed church complained to the King about her Catholicism and began their aggressive attempts to convert her, threatening excommunication if she did not conform. These attempts continued well into the 17th century. Late in life, Helen Hay appears to have relented. Her daughter, Margaret, Countess of Wigtown, summoned Mr John Livingston to her mother’s deathbed. From this meeting resulted her conversion document, The Confession and Conversion of My Lady C. of L. The minister may have written the conversion himself and merely

had her sign it, but the core of the piece was ­probably written or dictated by her, with him as editor. The Confession (1629), circulated widely. Helen Hay’s documented conversion signified a coup for the reformed church. pbg • NRS: CH2/177/2–3, Stirling Presbytery Records. Hay, H. (1629) The Confession and Conversion of the Right Honorable, Most Illustrious and Elect Lady, My Lady C of L. Johnston, G. P. (1929) ‘Introduction’, The Confession and Conversion of My Lady C. of L.; SP, 3, p. 572; 5, pp. 543–6; ODNB (2004) (see Livingstone, Helen).

born Leith, 10 March 1864, died France, 26 Jan. 1914. Philanthropist, public and community activist. Daughter of Margaret Scott, dressmaker, and James Hay, merchant. Elected to the first Edinburgh Parish Council (1895) and Edinburgh School Board (1897), she was particularly concerned to improve the circumstances of children in the city’s poorhouses. In Greece in 1896 and in 1897, she was at the front line in providing relief work for Armenian refugees, and in distributing famine-relief in the Kazan district of Russia in 1899. Moving to St Abbs, Berwickshire, for health reasons, she built ‘The Haven’, which became a gathering place for artists, musicians, writers and intellectuals, and a sanctuary for many. In addition to serving on Coldingham Parish Council and school board, she brought her organisational skills and practical approach to many independent community endeavours. She was central in establishing a lifeboat at St Abbs in 1911, after she witnessed the loss of the entire crew of a Danish steamer there in 1907, and was the first honorary secretary of the lifeboat. She also initiated a ‘Rocket Brigade’ where local children learned life-saving techniques using miniature apparatus; a certificated diving school for young people; recreational facilities for the seasonal ‘herring girls’; and lectures and debates for the young fishermen. It was reported that ‘amongst the fishing community she was held in high regard’ (Berwickshire News, 3 Feb. 1914). She participated in Celtic Revival circles, being a close friend of *Ella Carmichael and *Marjorie Kennedy-Fraser, and gave numerous lectures promoting the role of women in public life. PS

HAY, Jane,

• Berwickshire News, 3 Feb. 1914 (obit.); ‘Jane Hay of St Abbs Haven’, St Abbs Community Website, www.stabbs.org/ janehay.html; The Scotsman, 28 Jan. 1914 (obit.). HENERY, Marion, n. Jenkins, born Cambuslang 29 April 1910, died Coatbridge 15 Sept. 2001. Typist,

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Communist activist, hunger marcher. Daughter of Mary Robertson, farm servant, and Robert Jenkins, stonemason. The family lived in Cambuslang, where Marion Jenkins, the youngest of eight, attended Socialist Sunday School. Aged 14, she took a commercial course at Skerry’s College, Glasgow, before working for a carpet manufacturer and then for the United Mineworkers of Scotland. She became full-time organiser for the YCL in Scotland in 1931. In 1932 she helped organise the women’s contingent on the hunger march to London, which started from Lancashire. In 1933–4 she attended the Lenin School in the Soviet Union. She married Joe Henery, a miner, in 1935; they had three children. In 1937, unable to get work, they moved to Welwyn Garden City, then settled in Auchinloch, Kirkintilloch, during the war. Marion Henery was very active in the SCWG and in 1956 she took over responsibility for the CP Scottish Women’s Advisory Committee. Between 1956 and 1969 she organised classes and weekend schools for women. Working as secretary of the Geriatric Unit at Stobhill Hospital, she was active in NALGO and in the mid-60s campaigned on cervical cancer detection. In retirement, she became Secretary of the Scottish Old Age Pensioners Campaign and continued working for CND. She stayed in the CPGB until its end in 1991. nr • Questionnaire returned to NR, 1994; Author interviews 6 April 1994 and 17 Nov. 1995, for SOHC. MacDougall, I. (ed.) (1986–1991) Voices of the Hunger Marches: personal recollections by Scottish hunger marchers of the 1920s and 1930s, vols 1, 2, Rafeek, N. C. (2008) Communist Women in Scotland: Red Clydeside from the Russian Revolution to the end of the Soviet Union. Private information. HEPBURN, Anne n. Burton, born Dailly, Ayrshire 20 Aug. 1925, died Edinburgh 29 July 2016. Missionary, churchwoman and feminist activist. Daughter of Annie Sorrie, district nurse, and Thomas Burton, blacksmith. Annie Burton attended Girvan High School, graduated MA from Glasgow University and in 1946 began teaching at Barr village school. Her life changed direction after she heard a foreign missionary speak at Dailly parish church. In 1949 she began training at St Colm’s Missionary College, Edinburgh, and in 1950 took charge of the Girls School at Blantyre Church of Scotland Mission, Nyasaland (Malawi). A firm supporter of the Nyasaland National Congress,

she opposed the UK Government’s imposition of the Central African Federation. In 1954 she married fellow missionary Rev. Hamish Hepburn and the couple – under Special Branch surveillance – c­ ontinued as pro-independence campaigners during the 1959 State of Emergency. Their three children were born in Malawi. In 1966 they returned to a parish in Kirkcudbrightshire and Anne Hepburn’s activism found focus in the Church of Scotland Woman’s Guild. Inspired by the global Women’s Movement, she endeavoured to shake up the traditional organisation with her bold ecumenical Christian feminism, challenging distorted gender relations in church and society. As National President, she led an anti-apartheid boycott and stirred up controversy by praying to ‘Mother God’ at the Guild Annual Meeting (1982). She was engaged in wider feminist networks, chairing SCOW (1987–9) and working with the European Women’s Lobby and the WCC. Undimmed determination, energy and humour characterised her long and active life. LO • New College Library: NCL/ACC/2016/08. Family papers. Hepburn, A. (2011) Memories of Malawi and Scotland. The Scotsman 15 Oct. 2016 (obit.); Ursic, E. (2014) Women, Ritual and Power: placing female imagery of God in Christian worship. HEPBURN, Jane (Janet), Lady Seton, c. 1480– c. 1558. Religious patron. Daughter of Janet Douglas, daughter of the Earl of Morton, and Patrick Hepburn of Hailes, Earl of Bothwell. Jane Hepburn married George, 3rd Lord Seton, before December 1506. He died at Flodden Field in 1513. She was possibly the founder of the Dominican convent of Sciennes, Edinburgh, sometime before 20 January 1518. The building was certainly erected at her expense and she remained a generous benefactor. She helped rebuild Seton Collegiate Church in the 1520s, endowing two chaplains in the 1540s. Sciennes may have been founded for her own benefit, since she retired there once her sons were able to manage the family estate. Her grand-daughter, *Mary Seton (see Maries, the Four), became attendant to *Mary, Queen of Scots. She was buried in Seton Church beside her husband. kp

• Maidment, J. (ed.) (1841) Liber Conventus Saint Katherine Senensis Prope Edinburgh; Maitland, R. (1828 edn.) Historie or Chronicle of the house of Seytoun; Seton, G. (1896) A History of the Family of Seton, vol. ii; SP.

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born Shotts 11 March 1907, died Lanark 29 Dec. 1996. Teacher, government minister. Daughter of Jane McCrorie, and John Herbison, miner. Peggy Herbison was brought up with her five brothers in the close-knit Lanarkshire mining community of Shotts. Deeply committed to her roots, she made the town her lifelong home base. She progressed from Dykehead Public School to Bellshill Academy and the University of Glasgow (MA, 1928), later teaching English and history at Allan Glen’s, one of Glasgow’s foremost boys’ schools. She absorbed her parents’ Christian socialist politics and by 1944 was known in Labour Party circles as an impressive public speaker. Miners from the Party’s Baton Colliery branch invited her to become parliamentary candidate for North Lanark, where the sitting Unionist MP was an old Etonian ex-army officer. She demurred, telling the miners to ‘find a man’ (Hollis 1997, p. 121), but won the seat convincingly in the general election of July 1945. Because she was relatively young and small in stature, she was known as ‘the miners’ little sister’ at Westminster. Peggy Herbison sat uninterruptedly on Labour’s National Executive from 1948 to 1968, and served as party Chair 1956–7. In 1950, she was the first woman Labour MP from a Scottish constituency to achieve ministerial office, as Under-Secretary of State in the Scottish Office. In October 1964, Harold Wilson appointed her Minister of Pensions and National Insurance in the new Labour Government, a post using her social security expertise. She also became a Privy Councillor. Fulfilling the Party’s election pledge, she removed the stigma attached to means-tested national assistance but, by 1966, financial constraints were curtailing Labour’s welfare reform programme, limiting family allowances and state pensions. Peggy Herbison was unable to accept budgetary impositions and in July 1967 resigned as Minister. She did not contest North Lanark in 1970, encouraging future Labour leader, John Smith, to stand instead. However, she maintained a high profile in Scotland during the 1970s, considering her greatest honour to be her year (1970–1) as Lord High Commissioner, the monarch’s representative at the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland: she was the first woman incumbent. The University of Glasgow awarded her an honorary LLD in 1970. John Smith’s biographer categorised Peggy Herbison as ‘austere, religious and right-wing’

HERBISON, Margaret McCrorie (Peggy),

(McSmith 1994, p. 42), echoing the view of Roy Hattersley, her PPS. Her unmarried status, which she used as a kind of weapon, possibly led to such snap judgements. Yet Janey Buchan in a tribute at the time of her death suggested that her ‘sweet little-lady look’ was misleading, and had been carefully cultivated to project a respectable stereotype (Scotsman 1996). Significantly, she refused Harold Wilson’s offer of a life peerage, as she disapproved of the unelected House of Lords. iem • Motherwell Heritage Centre, Peggy Herbison Files: transcript, Helen Liddell’s funeral tribute, Jan. 1997. 1901 Census return; Glasgow Herald, 26 July 1967, 28 Jan. 1970; Herald, 22 July 1995, 30 Dec. 1996 (obit.), 31 Dec. 1996 (Appreciation); Hollis, P. (1997) Jennie Lee: a life; McSmith, A. (1993, 1994) John Smith: a life, 1938–1994; Mann, J. (1962) Woman in Parliament; ODNB (2004); Rosen, G. (2001) Dictionary of Labour Biography; Stenton, M. and Lees, S. (1981) Who’s Who of British Members of Parliament, vol. IV, 1945–1979; The Scotsman, 31 Dec 1996. HERSCHEL, Margaret Brodie, n. Stewart, born Dingwall 16 August 1810, died Collingwood, Kent, 3 August 1884. Hostess, correspondent. Daughter of Emilia Calder, and Dr Alexander Stewart, Church of Scotland minister and Gaelic scholar. Aged 18, Margaret Stewart, a woman of beauty, talent and piety, was introduced to John Herschel (1792–1871), astronomer, mathematician and polymath, one of the most renowned scientists in Europe, made a baronet in 1838. They married on 3 March 1829. The marriage, described as one of ‘unclouded happiness’, produced a remarkable family of nine daughters and three sons. Though not herself a scientist, Margaret Herschel shared her husband’s joy in astronomy and his interests in music and botany, to which she contributed illustrations: her South African botanical drawings (1833–8) were later published. She had a serene influence on her husband and their children whose education at home embraced practical and artistic skills as well as academic learning. Her hospitable and perfectly managed home in Kent – *Mary Somerville called it ‘a house by itself in the world’ – was open to a wide circle of friends, scientific and literary. A wonderful correspondent, her lively letters to other ‘scientific wives’ and family members, especially Caroline Herschel, Sir John’s aunt and astronomer-collaborator of his father Sir William, form a valuable part of the Herschel heritage. mtb

• Buttmann, G. (1974) The Shadow of the Telescope, a Biography of John Herschel; Crowe, M. et al. (eds) (1998)

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HEWAT Calendar of the Correspondence of Sir John Herschel (inc. 338 letters to or from Margaret); ODNB (2004) (Herschel, Sir John); (Bibl.); Warner, B. (ed.) (1991) Margaret Herschel: letters from the Cape 1834–1838.

born London 1 June 1890, died Edinburgh 12 May 1981. First woman surgeon in Scotland. Daughter of Mathilde Winternitz, and Michael Herzfeld, stockbroker. The daughter of Austrian immigrants, Gertrude Herzfeld spent almost all her professional life in Edinburgh, gaining her MBChB degree in 1914. She was house surgeon to Sir Harold Stiles at the Royal Hospital for Sick Children, Edinburgh, and after wartime posts at the Cambridge Military Hospital and Bolton Royal Infirmary, returned to Scotland in 1920. That year, she became the second female Fellow of the RCSE (the first, Alice Headwards Hunter, did not practise) and the first female honorary assistant surgeon at the Sick Children’s Hospital. By 1925, she was full surgeon there, serving for 20 years. A colleague remembered: ‘Before the days of chromosome determination, sex was mysteriously undefined in more children than we expected, and from all over Scotland they came for cosmetic repair and the difficult assessment of what course they were to follow. This was done by a great deal more than surgery: infinite thought, getting to know the child, the mother, the surroundings – a psychosomatic exercise in which Gertrude Herzfeld’s warmth and wisdom combined with her skill’ (BMJ, 1981). From 1920 to 1955 she was also surgeon at the Bruntsfield Hospital for Women and Children, staffed entirely by women. She carried out a wide range of procedures in paediatric and gynaecological surgery, and was noted for her precision and good teaching. Involved in the foundation of the Edinburgh School of Chiropody, she was medical adviser to the Edinburgh Cripple Aid Society. Gertrude Herzfeld joined the BMA in 1915, chaired the Edinburgh City Branch (1960–2), and was National President of the Medical Women’s Federation (1948–50). She published widely, in the Lancet (1920) and elsewhere, on such diverse topics as rupture of the intestine, uterine prolapse, congenital talipes (club foot), and malformations of the newborn. Unmarried, she spent her retirement in Edinburgh and died a few weeks before her 91st birthday, having blazed the trail for female surgeons in Scotland. hmd HERZFELD, Gertrude Marian Amalia,

Herzfeld, G. M. A. (1920) ‘Traumatic rupture of the intestine without external injury’, Lancet, 1, p. 377, (1950) ‘Injuries and malformations of the newborn’, Practitioner, 164, pp. 52–60. Birrell, G. (1995) A Most Perfect Hospital: the centenary of the Royal Hospital for Sick Children at Sciennes; BMJ 282, 1981 p. 883 (obit.); Creswell, C. H. (1926) The Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh; Masson, A. H. B. (1995) Portraits, Paintings and Busts in the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh; Young, D. G. (1999) ‘The Scots and paediatric surgery’, Journal of the RCSE, 44, 4, pp. 211–15.

n. Richards MBE, born London 15 May 1930, died Dervaig, Mull, 24 April 1984. Actor, theatre manager. Daughter of Rita Frances Turner, and Percival Thomas Richards, prison officer. Marianne Richards met her husband, John Barrie Hesketh (b. 1930) in London while they were training to be actors. After working in English theatre for several years, they moved to Scotland in 1960, where John Hesketh took up a post with the Scottish Community Drama Association. Three years later, they settled in Dervaig on the Isle of Mull and opened a guesthouse. For their guests’ entertainment, in 1966 they converted a byre beside their house into a theatre: thus was born Mull Little Theatre, the smallest professional theatre in Britain. They closed the guesthouse in 1970 to concentrate on the theatre, which they ran until Marianne Hesketh’s death in 1984. Although the theatre was tiny and they were the sole performers, Mull Little Theatre achieved wide recognition through British and European tours undertaken in addition to the annual summer seasons on Mull. Marianne Hesketh adapted a number of plays, including Strindberg’s Miss Julie and Chekhov’s The Bear, to allow them to be played as two-handers. Together they wrote a satire, ‘Willy Nilly’ (unpublished), and a fulllength play, Ostrich, a comedy about academia. In 1983 they were both made MBE for their achievements. A small professional drama company, independent of the original, still operates from a base in Dervaig under the new name of The Mull Theatre. bf

HESKETH, Marianne Edith Frances,

• Hesketh, M. and Hesketh, J. B. (1988) Ostrich. Hesketh, J. B. (1997) Taking Off: the story of the Mull Little Theatre.

born Prestwick 16 Sept. 1895, died Edinburgh 13 Oct. 1968. Missionary, historian, ecumenicist and

HEWAT, Elizabeth Glendinning Kirkwood,

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a­ dvocate of women’s equality in the Church of Scotland. Daughter of Elizabeth Glendinning, and Kirkwood Hewat, UFC minister, Prestwick. Elizabeth Hewat was educated at Wellington School, Ayr, and the University of Edinburgh. She had outstanding intellectual gifts, graduating MA in history and philosophy before taking a post as assistant lecturer in history at the University of St Andrews. From 1922 to 1926, she taught at the UFC Women’s Missionary College, Edinburgh – an institution with a progressive tradition in education and inclusive community. One of the first women to study theology at New College, she was the first to graduate BD (1926). Intending to work as a missionary, she believed she should be ordained in order to equip herself fully. Her case led to a debate on women’s ordination during the 1926 UFC General Assembly. The proposer argued that she had come top of her class, making it difficult to argue that she could not be put on the same level as the men. Although the motion failed, Elizabeth Hewat joined her sister in China, where she combined work as a teaching missionary with scholarly research comparing Hebrew and Confucian Wisdom literature. She returned to Scotland to complete her PhD (1933) and worked as unpaid assistant at North Merchiston Church, Edinburgh. She was a founding member and speaker on behalf of the Fellowship of Equal Service in the Church. Moving to Bombay, she became Professor of History at Wilson College, 1935–56. An elder in the United Church of North India, she frequently conducted worship in the Chapel, the Scots Kirk, and elsewhere. For many years she was editorial assistant and contributor to the International Review of Missions. After returning to Scotland, she wrote the official history of Church of Scotland Missions, served as National Vice-President of the Woman’s Guild, and undertook extensive speaking and writing commitments. In 1966, she received an honorary DD from the University of Edinburgh. She was a passionate supporter of CND, deeply involved in the growing international ecumenical movement and a lifelong advocate of equality in church and society. She wrote in 1931, ‘women in the church hold a subordinate position; and women of today ask why . . . Of one thing they are certain, and it is this, that it is not Christ who is barring the way’ (Hewat 1931, p. 145). lo • Hewat, E. (1931) Life & Work, New Series No. 16, April. Magnusson, M. (1987) Out of Silence ; Macdonald, L. A. O. (2000) A Unique and Glorious Mission: Women and

Presbyterianism in Scotland c. 1830–c. 1930; Sherrard, M. (ed.) (1993) Women of Faith. Private information. ‘Highland Mary’see CAMPBELL, Margaret

(1766–86)

HILL, Amelia, n. Paton, born Dunfermline 1820, died Edinburgh 5 July 1904. Sculptor. Daughter of Catherine McDiarmid, folklorist, and Joseph Neil Paton, damask designer. Amelia Paton enjoyed a free-spirited childhood, roaming the grounds of her Dunfermline home, where she received an informal education in natural science, Highland folklore and antiquities, and lessons from a Quaker governess. Surprisingly, despite the family’s involvement with art and design (her younger brothers Joseph Noel Paton and Waller Hugh Paton became painters), she ‘had no tuition in drawing and painting’ (Tooley 1895, p. 364). Using makeshift tools, she taught herself to model, presumably later refining her technique through casual instruction at friends’ studios. At 40, she launched her career with the exhibition of two busts (RSA 1860), having moved to Edinburgh with her brothers the previous year. Thereafter she showed more than 60 sculptures, mostly portraits, at the RSA, RA, and Glasgow Institute until 1882. In 1862, she married David Octavius Hill (1802–70), pioneer of photography, and their childless marriage was ‘one of mutual comradeship in art’ (Tooley 1932), he being her mentor and enthusiastic promoter, she providing vital assistance with his painting of the Disruption. As one of an emergent, indigenous school of sculpture, she created an oeuvre comprising idealised figures from national literature (The Mermaid of Galloway); portraits memorialising men of science and letters (Sir David Brewster); Free Church clergy (R. S. Candlish); national heroes (Regent Murray) and other Scottish notables (Countess of Elgin). There are some busts in the SNPG and several works were commissioned for monuments, the most celebrated being the statue of David Livingstone (Princes Street Gardens, Edinburgh). Excluded from RSA membership, she helped found the Albert Institute in Shandwick Place (1877), an alternative art society that welcomed aspirant artists regardless of gender: its exterior figures of Painting and Sculpture are by her. A woman of varied interests, she propagated exotic plants, decocted herbal remedies, studied phrenology, and collected Roman and Scottish antiquities. shh

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HOLM • NLS: Acc. 11315; MS 2628 ff. 18, 19; MS 1749 f. 54; Dep. 351; MS 10291 f. 143; MS 2629 ff. 1, 248, 249, corr. D. O. Hill, J. Noel Paton, Amelia Hill; RSA letter collection: corr. Hill and ‘1928 folder’. Gifford, W. (1904) ‘Mrs D. O. Hill’, Englishwoman’s Review, 5 Oct., pp. 280–2 (obit.); Hurtado, S. H. (2002) Genteel Mavericks: professional women sculptors in Victorian Britain; ODNB (2004); Tooley, S. A. (1895) ‘A famous lady sculptor: an interview with Mrs D. O. Hill’, The Young Woman, 35, (1932) ‘Notable Victorians’, Weekly Scotsman, 13 Feb., p. 6. HODGE, Hannah, born Lochgelly 6 Jan. 1751, died after 1833. Coalminer. Daughter of Bessie Adamson and William Hodge, coal-miners. Born at a time when miners and their families were still bonded slaves, Hannah Hodge is one of the very few coal-mining women about whom anything is known. She married William Cook but, as was common, retained her maiden name. Shortly after their fifth child was born, her husband was killed and she took over his job as a coal and stone miner, continuing until her children were old enough to support her. Hannah Hodge carried her two youngest children underground in a basket and took time out from work to breastfeed her baby. The older children carried the ‘redd’ or waste matter out of the pit on their backs and Hannah worked with men at the coal face. She ‘brought more coal to the bank than any other miner’ (Cook MSS). She not only had to dig coal but carry it to the surface as well, a job she would previously have done for her husband. Hannah Hodge’s grandson Archibald, born in 1833, wrote down details of conversations he remembered hearing as a child. They included working in areas where the air was so bad that no lamp would burn and illumination came from ‘fish heads’, and tales of a trial of strength between Hannah and another female miner in which they each carried four hundredweights (about 200 kilos) of coal. lk

• Cook, A. ‘Bygone life in Lochgelly, stray memories of an old miner’, MSS in possession of the Cook family, available at www.fifepits.co.uk/starter/stories/stor_4.htm Cook, A., Brown, P., Westwater, A. (1954) One Hundred Years of The Jenny Gray Pit.

n. MacLaren [Atalanta], born Macduff 18 Aug. 1834, died Stirling 12 Feb. 1900. Journalist and newspaper proprietor. Daughter of Margaret Donaldson, and Alexander MacLaren, bank agent. Jane MacLaren was a teacher in Stirling before marrying James Hogg (1823–76), editor of the

HOGG, Jane Donaldson,

Stirling Journal and Advertiser, in 1858. They had six daughters and one son. Widowed in 1876, ‘within a week’ she had decided to conduct the printing business and two newspapers (including the Bridge of Allan Reporter), with the assistance of a manager (Johnston 1900). From 1885 she wrote a ‘Ladies’ Column’ as ‘Atalanta’, proving ‘a born journalist’ (ibid.). One of her three surviving daughters, Anna Porteous Hogg (1862–1909), married Thomas Johnston, editor of the Stirling Journal, in 1887 and became co-editor of both papers from 1900 to 1912, continuing their tradition of Conservatism. Both Jane Hogg’s other daughters, Harriet Hogg and Margaret Murray Hogg, were headmistresses of St Hilda’s School for Girls, Stirling. Jane Hogg flourished in later life. She was the first woman elected (three times from 1888) to Stirling School Board ‘especially charged . . . with the care of the female education’, where she ‘more than justified her election’ (Stirling Observer 1900, p. 4). She was also known for her business sense and eloquent advocacy of charitable causes. She was local Hon Treasurer of the Scottish Domestic Servants’ Benevolent Association, assisting *Carrie Johnstone of Alva, and an active church member and organist. A founder member of Stirling Natural History and Archaeological Society (SNHAS) in 1878, she contributed five papers on local history to their Transactions, which she also edited. mamc • Elliot, B. J. (1979) ‘The Stirling Journal and Advertiser: a history’, Stirling Journal and Advertiser Index, vol. 2, pp. 1–2; Johnston, T. W. R., ‘The Late Mrs Hogg’, Stirling Journal and Advertiser, 16 February 1900, p. 4; Kidston, R. and Morris, D. B. (eds) (1900) ‘The Late Mrs Hogg’, Trans. SNHAS, 6, II, pp. 63–4; Stirling Observer and Advertiser, ‘The Late Mrs Hogg’, 16 February 1900 (anonymous appreciation); ‘The Late Mrs Hogg’, reprinted from North Parish Church Magazine, 9 March 1900, p. 4. HOGG, Margaret

see LAIDLAW, Margaret (1730–1831)

HOLM, Helen Warren, n. Gray, born Jordanhill, Glasgow, 14 March 1907, died Ayr 14 Dec. 1971. Golf champion. Daughter of Violet Warren, and Thomas Gray, Professor of Chemistry. Helen Gray first came to prominence in 1928 when she won the inaugural Lanarkshire Ladies’ Championship, a feat which she repeated in 1929 and 1932. After her marriage to farmer Andrew Holm, she won the Scottish Ladies’ Amateur Championship in 1930, captured it on four further occasions (1932, 1937, 1948, 1950) and was runnerup five times. Success in the 1934 Ladies’ British

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Open Amateur Championship at Royal Porthcawl paved the way for international honours and she was a member of the Curtis Cup team that halved the match against the USA at Gleneagles in 1936. She also won the British title in 1938 and took part in two further Curtis Cups (1938, 1948), but turned down the opportunity of playing in the first postwar challenge on American soil in 1950 because she felt her son Michael was too young to be left. In 1951, having previously played against both teams, she was non-playing GB captain in matches against France and Belgium. Renowned for her mental and physical toughness, she continued to compete after a thrombosis in late 1951 nearly ended her career, and represented Scotland in the home internationals of 1955 and 1957, thereby completing a total of 14 appearances for her country. The Helen Holm Trophy, played over her home course of Troon, was instituted in 1973, two years after her death. jk • Cossey, R. (1984) Golfing Ladies; George, J. (2003) ‘Women and golf in Scotland’, PhD, Univ. of Edinburgh; Mair, L. (1992) One Hundred Years of Women’s Golf ; ODNB (2004). HOOD, Morag Macleod, born Glasgow 12 Dec. 1942, died London 5 Oct. 2002. Actor. Daughter of Helen Kelso, and Thomas Hood, master of works, Glasgow theatres. Morag Hood was educated at Bellahouston Academy, Glasgow and the University of Glasgow. With no formal drama training, she gained experience as anchor for an STV current affairs programme aimed at teenagers, scoring several exclusives, including an interview with the Beatles. Her stage debut was a walk-on role in Sam Cree’s Wedding, at the Glasgow Metropole (1964). Following seasons in Scottish repertory theatres (Dundee, Pitlochry and the Royal Lyceum), and performances at Liverpool Playhouse and the Bristol Old Vic, her London West End debut was as Clarice in Goldoni’s The Servant of Two Masters (1968). Morag Hood had an emotional power that belied her slight frame. Her role as Natasha in the marathon BBC TV production of War and Peace (1972) brought her to the attention of a wider public; she was chosen for the part out of 1,000 candidates. Her performance over more than 20 episodes was widely acclaimed, maturing from love-struck teenager to the wife of Pierre Bezukhov (played by Anthony Hopkins). Other notable work followed: Lorca’s The House of Bernarda Alba at Greenwich Theatre (1973) and as Juliet at Liverpool Playhouse (1974). She joined

the National Theatre in 1976, playing Gasparina in Goldoni’s Il Campiello and took the title role in Feydeau’s farce The Lady from Maxim’s. Pat Marmont, her agent, described her as having ‘the elegance and poise of a dancer . . . [S]he was like a piece of prize porcelain’ (Guardian 2002). Morag Hood was seen again in several television series: Families; Dr Finlay’s Casebook; Coronation Street; Heartbeat; Bergerac; and Z-Cars. Latterly, she played the downtrodden wife in the bodiceripper A Sense of Guilt. She had few film roles but in 1998 returned to Scotland to play Robert Duvall’s wife in the football epic A Shot for Glory. RM • The Guardian, 10 Oct. 2002, The Stage, 17 Oct. 2002, The Times, 15 Nov. 2002 (obits). HOPEKIRK, Helen, m. Wilson, born Edinburgh 20 May 1856, died Cambridge, MA, 19 Nov. 1945. Pianist and composer. Daughter of Helen Croall, and Adam Hopekirk, music seller. Showing early promise as a pianist, Helen Hopekirk was taught by George Lichtenstein. She played Beethoven’s 5th Piano Concerto with the Edinburgh Amateur Orchestral Society in 1876, and also performed with A. C. (later Sir Alexander) Mackenzie. At her father’s dying wish, she studied at the Leipzig Conservatoire under Maase, Reinecke, Jadassohn and Richter, making her Gewandhaus debut in 1878, playing the Chopin F minor Concerto, and meeting Liszt. Her London debut was at the Crystal Palace under Manns in 1879, playing the second SaintSaëns Concerto. She met Clara Schumann, Grieg and Rubinstein, whose playing she particularly admired and whom she recalled replacing the artificial roses in her hat with real ones from his table. In 1882, she married London music critic William A. Wilson, who devoted himself to furthering her career. Theirs was a happy marriage without issue. From 1883 to 1886, after playing in Boston to acclaim, Helen Hopekirk stayed in the USA for three seasons, appearing in over 60 recitals and concerts. In 1887, she studied piano in Vienna with Leschetizky who described her as the finest woman musician he had ever known. She also studied composition with Nawratil and played with Ysaye. From 1897 to 1901 she was an influential teacher in the New England Conservatory, then taught privately, taking US citizenship in 1918. She and her husband returned to Scotland in 1919, expecting a musical renaissance which did not however take place. Helen Hopekirk resumed teaching and

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­ erforming in America, though greatly affected p by her husband’s illness and death in 1926. Her last performance was a recital of her own works in Steinert Hall, Boston, in 1939. As a composer, her output is varied. It includes a fine early Violin Sonata and her outstanding settings of Heine’s Der Nordsee are deeply thoughtful lieder with a quiet beauty and assurance which can stand comparison with the very best in the genre. She premiered her Concertstück in Edinburgh in 1894 and 1904 in Boston, and her Concerto in D major for Piano and Orchestra in Boston in 1900. The score and parts are missing. Her music is romantic, poetic and grateful to play, and exhibits occasional influences of Scottish folk music, which she regarded as an important element in musical education. In 1905 she had published a collection of Scottish folk songs in her own arrangements, describing in her introduction her memories of Gaelic singing – ‘something ancient, remote, more easily felt than expressed’. At the same time, she had criticised the state of cultural affairs in Scotland, resulting from the stifling influences both of Calvinism (‘that blight’) and the ‘Anglicizing of everything Scottish since the Union’. She admired *Marjory Kennedy-Fraser’s work, but unlike Kennedy-Fraser, her piano writing can occasionally be repetitive. Her songs were very popular in their day. jp • Hopekirk, H. (1905, 1992) Seventy Scottish Songs Selected and Arranged by Helen Hopekirk, (1909) Iona Memories, Sundown. Ammer, C. (1980) Unsung: A History of Women in American Music, pp. 91–3; Hall, C. H. (1954) Helen Hopekirk 1856–1945 (privately printed: includes repertoire and performances); Hutton, F. (1922) Review of ‘Iona Memories’, The Scottish Musical Magazine, IV, 1 Sept., p. 11; Johnson, F. H. (1931) Musical Memories of Hartford, pp. 245–6; Muller, D. and Steigerwalt, G. (eds) (1993) Hopekirk, Helen (1894) Concertstück in D minor ; Muller, D. (1995) ‘Helen Hopekirk, pianist, composer, pedagogue’, Diss., Hartt School of Music, USA (Bibl. and listings of works); Anon. (1920) ‘Vignettes I: Helen Hopekirk’, Scottish Musical Magazine I, 6, 2 Feb., pp. 168–9. HOPPRINGLE (or Pringle), Isabella, born before 1505, died Coldstream 26 Jan. 1538. Prioress of Coldstream, spy. Daughter of Adam Hoppringle of that ilk. A member of the prominent Border family of Pringle who provided the Cistercian convent of Coldstream with prioresses from 1475 to 1588, Isabella Hoppringle was prioress c. 1505–38, succeeding her aunt Margaret Hoppringle. She was

considered as ‘one of the best and assured spies’ that the English had in Scotland (Rogers 1879, p.xxiv). In 1509, the convent was granted a license to hold communications with Englishmen in times of war and peace. Isabella Hoppringle switched allegiance several times between England and Scotland depending on which posed the more serious threat to the convent. She is said to have strongly supported Scottish rule but was also attached to English interests, due to the convent’s closeness to the border. Local tradition says Dame Isabella and her nuns helped gather the dead from Flodden Field, burying them at the convent. In 1515, when *Margaret Tudor lived nearby, the prioress was ‘an intelligent and congenial companion’ to her (ibid., p.xxi). Margaret persuaded England to protect the convent from English troops. Margaret’s patronage led James V to grant lands and money to Coldstream in 1525. On Dame Isabella’s death, Janet Pringle (fl. c. 1537–60) succeeded her, as Prioress and spy, but could not prevent the priory’s burning by the English in 1545. She married her kinsman James Pringle of Langmuir in the 1550s. Elizabeth Lamb (fl. 1546–73), prioress of the Cistercian house of St Bothan’s, was more successful in saving her convent. She was reprimanded for assisting the English army in 1546 to protect herself and the priory’s tenants and servants, but was later exonerated for her actions. She was still listed as prioress in 1573, although another prioress, Elizabeth Hume, had been granted the priory in 1566. kp • NRS: GD110, Hamilton-Dalrymple of North Berwick Muniments; GD158, Humes of Marchmount. HRHS; Innes, C. (ed.) Carte Monalium de Northberwic; Meikle, M. (1997) ‘Victims, Viragos and Vamps: women of the sixteenth-century Anglo-Scottish frontier’ in J. C. Appleby and P. Dalton (eds) Government, Religion and Society in Northern England, 1000–1700; Rogers, C. (ed.) (1879) Chartulary of the Cistercian Abbey of Coldstream; Sanderson, M. (2002) A Kindly Place?

died Dornoch 1722 or 1727. The incident commonly regarded as ending Scottish witch persecutions is the famous ‘last execution’ for witchcraft, that of Janet Horne in Dornoch. The witch’s stone in Littletown supposedly marks the site, but no court records survive. The first known report, by Edmund Burt (1727), stated that a mother and daughter were condemned; the daughter escaped but the mother was burned in a pitch barrel. James Fraser reported great uproar over witchcraft in the area. Other references are much later. In 1819, C. K. Sharpe sensationalised the event, which he HORNE, Janet,

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dated to 1722, describing the witch being accused of riding her daughter, transformed into a pony, and composedly warming herself beside the execution fire against the cold. The name Janet Horne, accepted by most modern commentators, is a later attribution. Probably a woman, perhaps called Janet Horne, was executed at Dornoch in the 1720s for witchcraft, but the date and circumstances remain uncertain. lfh • Cowan, E. J. and Henderson, L. (2002) ‘The last of the witches? The survival of Scottish witch belief ’, in J. Goodare (ed.) The Scottish Witch-Hunt in Context (Bibl.). HORSBRUGH, Florence Gertrude, Baroness Horsbrugh, MBE, born Edinburgh 13 Oct.

1889, died Edinburgh 6 Dec. 1969. Politician. Daughter of Mary Harriet Stark Christie, and Henry Moncrieff Horsbrugh, chartered accountant. The youngest of three daughters, Florence Horsbrugh was educated at Lansdowne House, Edinburgh, St Hilda’s, Folkestone and Mills College, California. As a young woman during the First World War, she organised travelling canteens, for which she was made MBE in 1920. Active in the Unionist party, she was elected to Parliament in 1931 for one of the few remaining two-member seats, in Dundee; she saw it as an opportunity to elect a woman and a man. It was an unusual result for Dundee, not only because she was the city’s first woman MP but also because she was a Unionist. She held the seat until 1945. ‘A tall, striking figure’, she was an outstanding speaker with a ‘resonant, well-modulated voice’ (Pugh 1992, p. 193). In 1936, she was the first woman to reply to the King’s Speech and, in so doing, the first politician to be televised. She successfully introduced two private member’s bills, the first to curb meths drinking (1937); the second the Adoption of Children (Regulation) Act 1939 – of particular concern were children sent abroad to be adopted. She was Parliamentary Secretary, Ministry of Health (1939–45), only the fourth woman to occupy government office, responsible for developing arrangements for the evacuation of children and other priority groups from cities threatened by bombing. She retained oversight of this programme throughout the Second World War. Through the Scottish Special Housing Association, she supported the development of five large purpose-built camps to accommodate children from the Scottish cities. In 1944, she was injured during an air raid on London, but it did not prevent her from spending much of the last year of the war assisting in drafting the scheme for a national health service, and she also became

Parliamentary Secretary, Ministry of Food, in 1945. That year, she became the first Scottish woman Privy Councillor and was awarded LLD by the University of Edinburgh. In 1946, the RCSE recognised her work with an honorary fellowship, the first such award made by the college to a woman. Defeated in the 1945 election, she returned to Parliament in 1950 as member for Moss Side, Manchester. She was appointed Minister for Education in 1951; it became a Cabinet post in 1953, and she became the first woman member of a Conservative Cabinet. She resigned from office in 1954, possibly because education was not a priority for the government, and she was forced to plan for reduced expenditure. Throughout her career, she was active in international affairs: at the League of Nations 1933–6 and in 1945 as a member of the delegation to the San Francisco conference that drafted the UN Charter. She was delegate to the Council of Europe and the Western European Union, 1955–61. Florence Horsbrugh was made a life peer in 1959. She was described as ‘one of the best-equipped party politicians of all the women in Parliament’ (The Times 1969). Her fellow MP – and opponent – *Jean Mann saw both sides: ‘One has a cold, stern appearance, formidable in controversy; detached and inflexible – complete party politician. At close quarters, another Florence emerges: kind, warm-hearted, unstuffy and genial; interested in knitting-patterns and getting home to her fireside’ (Mann 1962, p. 24). tb • Churchill Archives Centre, Cambridge University: Papers of Florence Horsbrugh. Baxter, K. (2009), ‘Florence Gertrude Horsbrugh. The Conservative Party’s forgotten first lady’, Conservative History Journal 1, 9, pp. 21–3; Begg, T. (1987) 50 Special Years: A Study in Scottish Housing; DWT; Mann, J. (1962) Woman in Parliament; ODNB (2004); Pugh, M. (1992) Women and the Women’s Movement in Britain; The Times, 8 Dec. 1969 (obit.); Watson, N. (2000) ‘Daughters of Dundee. Gender politics in Dundee: the representation of women 1870–1997’, PhD, The Open University. HOTCHKIS, Anna Mary, born Crookston, Paisley, 30 May 1885, died Kirkcudbright 14 Oct. 1984. Artist and traveller. Daughter of Mary Anne Young, and Richard James Hotchkis, Major, Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders. Anna Hotchkis and her sister Isobel ­(1879–1947) studied at GSA from 1906 to 1910, and afterwards at the Munich Academy of Fine Art. Between 1912 and 1916, Anna Hotchkis

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attended ECA. She settled in Kirkcudbright on the ­recommendation of her tutor, Robert Burns, joining a coterie of artists and maintaining a studio there for the rest of her life. Anna Hotchkis painted mostly landscape, architecture and flower subjects in oils, watercolours and pastels, exhibiting in Kirkcudbright, Edinburgh, Glasgow, London and Shanghai. Particularly interested in Chinese art, she left for China in 1922, teaching art at Yenching University, Beijing (1922–24), and experimented with colour printmaking. Having travelled widely round China (1926–37), and visited Japan and Korea, she returned to Scotland in 1937, but continued to travel to Europe and North America after the Second World War. With her American companion, Mary Mullikin, she produced two illustrated books (Mullikin and Hotchkis 1935, 1973) and in 1938 they exhibited their Chinese paintings at The Corcoran Gallery, Washington DC. j o s • Corcoran Museum of Art: Typescript: ‘ “Special Exhibition of paintings in tempera, wash and water colour by Mary Augusta Mullikin and Anna M. Hotchkis”, The Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington DC, 8–30 Oct. 1938’. Mullikin, M. A. and Hotchkis, A. M. (1935, Beijing) Buddhist Sculptures at the Yun Kang Caves, (1973, imprint Hong Kong) The Nine Sacred Mountains of China. Bourne, P. (ed.) (2000) Kirkcudbright, 100 years of an artists’ colony; Burkhauser, J. (ed.) (1990) Glasgow Girls; Glasgow Herald, 9 Sept. 1982; The News, 12 Feb. 1981. Gordon, H. (2008, 2nd ed.) Tales of the Kirkcudbright Artists; Anna Hotchkis: a Scottish painter-printmaker in China: www. easternimp.blogspot.co.uk/2015/07/anna-hotchkis-scottishpainter.html HOUSTON, Caterina (or Catherine) Rita Murphy Gribbin (Renée), m1 Balharrie, m2 Aherne, m3 Stewart, born Johnstone, Renfrewshire, 24 July

1902, died Surrey 9 Feb. 1980. Comedienne and actor. Daughter of Elizabeth Houston and James Houston (formerly Gribbin), variety ­performers. Born into a showbusiness family, Renée Houston made her professional debut at 14, playing for three seasons with Fyfe & Fyfe’s Rothesay Entertainers, working with veteran comic Charlie Kemble. At 18 she and her younger sister Billie Houston (Sarah McMahon Gribbin, 1906–72) stood in for their parents at a theatre in Airdrie, and the Houston Sisters were born. In their act, gamine Billie played a boy to her more feminine elder sister’s girl, although Renée’s precocious ability to charm, and sometimes shock,

an audience belied her Bo-Peep image. After appearing in pantomime with Tommy Lorne at the Pavilion Theatre, Glasgow, a week’s try-out at Shoreditch in October 1925 led to a booking at the London Coliseum, where The Era’s critic found the sisters ‘a clever pair who speak like Scots and sing like Americans’ (20 Jan. 1926). Their success led to an appearance in the 1926 Royal Variety Command Performance and established them as one of Britain’s leading variety acts. In 1935, when Billie’s ill health ended the partnership, Renée Houston began a solo career, scoring a personal triumph in the musical comedy Love Laughs at the London Hippodrome. The following year, while working on the film Fine Feathers, she met the love of her life, American actor Donald Stewart, who became her third husband. They formed a successful variety partnership, touring South Africa in 1938 and appearing in a further Royal Command performance. From the 1950s, Renée Houston worked increasingly in the theatre, acting opposite Charles Laughton in The Party, appearing on television in Dr Finlay’s Casebook and becoming a sought-after screen character actor, with appearances in nearly 40 films ranging from A Town Like Alice (1956) and The Horse’s Mouth with Alec Guinness (1958) to Polanski’s Cul de Sac (1966) and several of the ‘Carry On’ series. Latterly an outspoken panellist on the long-running radio series ‘Petticoat Line’, she was described by Albert Mackie as ‘probably the most talented comedienne Scotland ever produced’ (Mackie 1973, p. 104). Writing in the Glasgow Herald, John Easton summed her up as ‘one of the most abrasive, petulant, outrageous, controversial, ebullient and lovable characters on the British stage’. pm • Houston, R. (1974) Don’t Fence Me In. Bruce, F. (2000) Scottish Showbusiness, Music Hall, Variety and Pantomime ; Devlin, V. (1991) King’s, Queen’s and People’s Palaces: an oral history of the Scottish variety theatre ; Easton, J. Glasgow Herald, 11 Feb. 1980; Irving, G. (1977) The Good Auld Days: the story of Scotland’s entertainers from music hall to television; Mackie, A. D. (1973) The Scotch Comedians, pp. 104–5; The Era, 20 Jan. 1926, p. 16; The Scotsman, 11 Feb. 1980 (obit.); The Times, 28 June 1935, 11 Feb. 1980 (obit.).

n. Hardie, born Cumnock, Ayrshire, 5 Oct. 1885, died Mauchline, Ayrshire, 27 June 1947. Campaigner, local politician. Daughter of Lillias Balfour Wilson, and James Keir Hardie, journalist and Labour MP.

HUGHES, Agnes Paterson (Nan),

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The Hardie family moved from Lanarkshire to the mining town of Cumnock after Keir Hardie was appointed trade union organiser for the Ayrshire miners in 1881. Nan Hardie attended school locally, but her parents could not afford to educate her further. A serious illness in 1902 undermined her health; in later years she suffered from debilitating bouts of depression, possibly aggravated by her father’s prolonged absences to pursue his political career. Although London-based from the 1890s, Keir Hardie insisted that the family should remain in Cumnock to provide him with a retreat from campaigning pressures. Money was always a problem, making life for his wife and daughter very insecure. Keir Hardie was proud of his daughter’s socialist commitment, but did little at a practical level to draw out her political talents. She was treated as an unpaid secretary in his career as MP for Merthyr Tydfil from 1900. However, through this Welsh connection she became close to the Hughes family of Abercynon, especially Aggie Hughes and her brother Emrys (1894–1969). Her work with them against conscription helped re-energise her after a period of depression around the time of her father’s death in 1915. Her regard for Emrys Hughes was heightened by his wartime stance as a conscientious objector – he was imprisoned for nine months in 1916. She married him in 1924, after he had come to Scotland to work as a journalist for the socialist weekly, Forward. The couple continued to live in Cumnock, where Emrys Hughes encouraged his wife to establish her own political identity. She was elected as a Labour councillor for Cumnock and Holmhead in 1933 and two years later succeeded her husband as Provost (1935–47). She helped to initiate reforms that gave Cumnock a socially progressive reputation, especially in the provision of council housing. However, from 1939 the war may have intensified her depressive tendencies, not least because there was a tension between her commitment to pacifism and service to the community (Benn 1992). She continued to be a popular civic leader, but her mental and physical health deteriorated. In 1946, Emrys Hughes was elected Labour MP for South Ayrshire in a parliamentary by-election. His success may inadvertently have precipitated Nan Hughes’s death the following year, as her ultimate fear was abandonment. iem • Benn, C. (1992) Keir Hardie, (Bibl.); Forward, 5 July 1947 (obit.); ODNB (2004) (see Hardie, Agnes Paterson); SLL.

HUGHES, Edith

see BURNET, Edith (1888–1971)

fl. 1598–1602. Assault victim. In December 1598, Katherine Hugone, who lived in a cottage at Burnside of Saling, suffered a vicious assault for some unknown reason. Alexander Rowan of Sandiedub and his accomplices ‘put violent hands in hir persoune, and sett hir bair erse upoune ane reid hett girdill (red-hot griddle), standand upoun ane ingill (fire), held her perforce thairon quhill (until) ane grit pairt of the flesche of hir hipis was brunt’ (Dalyell 1798, p. 56). Indicted for murder in 1602, he audaciously argued that the case should not be heard because she was not burnt to death. The Lord Advocate disagreed, saying the crime deserved death. He continued proceedings against Alexander Rowan for all his crimes, including animal theft and shooting one Christian Hamilton in the head. Justice prevailed for Katherine Hugone and other victims, as he was executed on the Castle Hill of Edinburgh. Onlookers commented that a cruel man was hanged for his violence towards women. mmm HUGONE, Katherine,

• ‘Diary of Robert Birrell, 1532–1605’, in Dalyell, J. D. (ed.) (1798) Fragments of Scottish History; Crim. Trials vol. ii, pp. 391–3. HUME, Anna, fl. 1629–44. Writer. Daughter of Barbara Johnstoun of Elphinstone, and Sir David Hume of Godscroft, humanist, historian and Latin poet. Anna Hume’s only known work, The Triumphs of Love: Chastity: Death (1644), is the first known example of printed secular writing by a Scottish woman. A partial translation of the medieval philosophical allegory, I Trionfi, by Petrarch, into highly wrought English couplets, it is dedicated to Princess Elizabeth of Bohemia, daughter of *Elizabeth of Bohemia (see Stewart, Elizabeth). Little is known of Anna Hume’s life but she belonged to a scholarly family; her brother composed mathematical treatises. Intellectually, she appears close to her prolifically published father. After his death, she helped orchestrate the publication of his History of the Houses of Douglas and Angus. When the History finally appeared in 1644, so did her translation, published by the same Edinburgh printer. The daughter had gained a literary presence of her own, demonstrating the creative skill that William Drummond, in a letter to her, had already observed (NLS: MS 2061).

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The Triumphs are an impressive blend of skilful imitation and sophisticated invention. At the end of each trionfo is a prose commentary or, in her words, an ‘Annotation’, providing an explanatory gloss of linguistic, historical, or cultural points which she feels may interest her reader. She is especially concerned to comment on the representation of Petrarch’s allegorical women, often with elegant wit. These ‘Annotations’ may have been intended to instruct and entertain the Princess Palatinate, nicknamed ‘la Grecque’ for her well-established intellectual reputation. She bestows lavish praise on the Princess but, in the absence of documentary evidence, it is difficult to prove whether this attests Elizabeth’s actual literary patronage or whether Anna Hume herself visited The Hague, where the exiled Elector and Electress had created a distinguished court culture. Her alliance with the Princess provokes speculation about cultural connections between Scottish and European women in the Renaissance. Above all, Anna Hume’s fascination lies with the figure of Laura, the beautiful virgin beloved by Petrarch. In a dedicatory poem, she proclaims that she has ‘tane [taken]’ her ‘[f ]rom the dark Cloyster, where she did remain/Unmarkt, because unknown’. Symbolically, she presents Princess Elizabeth with a newly unveiled or rediscovered Laura, sealing her Triumphs as one of the most interesting and ‘protofeminist’ works of Renaissance women’s writing. sd

Ernest (Desmond) Humphreys. This marriage lasted until her death. She had three sons by her first husband and a daughter by her second. From 1877 onwards, Eliza Humphreys, under the pseudonym ‘Rita’, was the author of some 120 books, plays and essays. She began by writing light, sometimes ‘daring’, popular fiction and was compared to Marie Corelli. Later she used her novels to express her own opinions and beliefs. In spite of her own professional success, and though she founded the Writers’ Club for Women in 1902, she disapproved of the contemporary New Woman movement, attacking it in such novels as A Husband of No Importance (1894) and Souls (1903). Unconvinced by the claims of organised religion, she took up theosophy, addressing problems of belief in Calvary (1909), which, with two other novels, was filmed. After the First World War, literary fashions changed and her work fell out of favour. In addition, her husband became an invalid, forcing her to apply to charitable organisations for aid, sometimes unsuccessfully because her writing did not meet the necessary standard. In 1930 she received an award from the Royal Bounty Fund: Queen Mary was an enthusiast for her novels. She wrote an autobiography in old age, two years before her death. marb • ‘Rita’ [E. M. J. Humphreys], Works as above, and (1906) Saba Macdonald, (1936) Recollections of a Literary Life . ODNB (2004).

• NLS: MS 2061. Hume, A. (1644) The Triumphs of Love: Chastitie: Death translated out of Petrarch by Mris Anna Hume. Dunnigan, S. M. (2004) ‘Daughterly Desires: representing and re-imagining the feminine in Anna Hume’s “Triumphs”’, in S. M. Dunnigan et al. (eds) Woman and the Feminine in Medieval and Early Modern Scottish Writing ; HSWW (Bibl.); *ODNB (2004); Reid, D. (ed.) (1996) David Hume of Godscroft’s The History of the House of Douglas, 2 vols. HUMPHREYS, Elizabeth Margaret Jane (Eliza) [Rita], n. Gollan, m1 Booth, m2 Humphreys, born

Gollanfield, Inverness-shire, 14 June 1850, died Bath 1 Jan. 1938. Novelist. Daughter of Jane Plumb, and John Gilbert Gollan, landowner and businessman. Eliza Gollan, the second of three children, was born on the family estate in Inverness-shire but brought up and educated (largely at home) in Australia, where her father had business interests. The family returned to London when she was 14 years old. In 1872 she married Karl Booth, a musician. The marriage ended unhappily and she later married the Anglo-Irish professional singer William

HUNTER, Allison Carnegie, n. Anderson, born Glasgow 8 Jan. 1942, died Glasgow 23 July 2013. Teacher, Scottish nationalist, political organiser and SNP councillor. Daughter of Anne Hannavey, seamstress, and Thomas Anderson, railway stoker. Allison Anderson was educated at Pollokshields Secondary School, before training at Jordanhill Teacher Training College. She joined the SNP while at secondary school, later citing her teacher Oliver Brown – co-founder of the National Party of Scotland decades earlier – as a key influence. As a young woman, however, her main political focus was the peace movement, and she remained a committed unilateralist throughout her life. In 1963 she met and married Ian Hunter, and they moved to London to enable him to pursue his career as a commercial artist. She taught at the school in Newham which their three children attended. The couple became active in the SNP’s London branch, regularly visiting Scotland to campaign in elections. They returned to Glasgow for good in 1979. Allison Hunter continued to

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teach, but politics gradually overtook education as her formidable organisational skills became apparent. She came to national prominence as Jim Sillars’ election agent in the 1988 Glasgow Govan by-election, in which the SNP achieved a notable victory in one of Labour’s safest seats, with a swing of over 33 per cent. In 1990, she left teaching to become the SNP’s full-time National Organiser, playing a key role in modernising the behind-the-scenes organisation of the party, and laying the groundwork for its subsequent electoral success. In 2002, Allison Hunter retired from HQ – but not from politics. She served as election agent for the author of this entry in the 2007 Scottish Parliament election in Glasgow Govan, and for John Mason in the Glasgow East by-election in 2008. She was successful in both. Only in later life did she seek political office for herself, being elected to serve the Govan ward on Glasgow City Council in 2007, eventually becoming leader of the SNP group, and stewarding the party to an increase in councillors in the 2012 election. She stood down as leader shortly afterwards and died the following summer of non-Hodgkins lymphoma; only those closest to her knew that she had battled illness for a number of years. At the time of Allison Hunter’s death, the SNP was the largest party in Scotland, the party of government, and was preparing for a referendum on Scottish independence. These achievements would have seemed highly fanciful to those in the fringe party which she joined as a teenager; certainly none would have come to pass without the thousands of activists whom she trained and mentored over the decades. NS

as a lyricist and poet, and in 1792, Joseph Haydn, with whom she was friendly, began setting her verses to music. His first set of Canzonettas includes at least six of her songs. Known as ‘Haydn’s muse’ (Nares 1848), she produced many songs, which Haydn’s music brought to a wide audience. These were ‘very popular among the cultivated circles of society’, while her poems also ‘deservedly gained for her the reputation of a woman of genius’, ­according to her niece *Joanna Baillie, who credited her with ‘a considerable influence on my mind’ (Baillie, n.d.). Anne Hunter published Poems in 1802, and a second volume in 1804, dedicated to the memory of Susan, daughter of Archibald Macdonald, the Lord Chief Baron, whose etchings illustrate it. John Hunter’s death in 1793 left Anne dependent on others for support, ameliorated by the sale of his effects in 1799 and a pension, connected to the Hunterian museum, London. Her poems covered not only family and lost love, but history, patriotism and current social issues, including lyrics for a collection of national songs. Her work is now benefiting from re-examination by scholars (see Grigson 2009). dls

• The Herald, 25 July 2013; The Scotsman, 25 July 2013 (obits). Personal knowledge.

• Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine Library: Hunterian Society Deposit, MS 5613/68. Hunter, Mrs. J. (1802) [Anne Home] Poems, (1804) The Sports of the Genii. Baillie, J. (n. d.) ‘Memoirs written to please my Nephew, William Baillie’; Currie, J. M. (2001) ‘Poet and lyricist Anne Hunter: more than “Haydn’s Muse” ’, in N. Kushigian and S. Behrendt (eds) Scottish Women Poets of the Romantic Period, 2001; DBAWW (1985); Grigson, C. (2009) The Life and Poems of Anne Hunter: Haydn’s tuneful voice; HSWW (Bibl.); Nares, R. (1848) ‘Memoir of Mrs. John Hunter, by Archdeacon Nares’ in J. B. Nichols (ed.) Literary History of the Eighteenth Century, vol. 7; ODNB (2004) (Hunter, Anne; Hunter, John).

n. Home, born Greenlaw, Berwickshire 1742, died London 7 Jan. 1821. Poet, ballad- and song-writer. Daughter of Mary Hutchinson, and Robert Boyne Home, surgeon. The seventh of nine children, in 1771 Anne Home married John Hunter (1728–93), the distinguished Lanarkshire anatomist and surgeon. Of their four children, two survived childhood. As hostess for John and his brother William in London, she kept house for an array of servants, relatives and students. Her conversation parties were notable for their unaffected character, and she was friendly with the bluestocking circle. Having written poetry from her youth, she was recognised

HUNTER, Margaret Annie, n. Anderson, born Bridgeton, Glasgow, 11 Nov. 1922, died London 21 Feb. 1986. Communist activist. Daughter of Margaret Rippey, and James Anderson, milk ­salesman. The youngest of five children, Margaret Anderson was involved with the Young Pioneers in the Gorbals district of Glasgow, joining the YCL at 14. Growing up in Polmadie, she attended Queen’s Park High School, followed by work as a typist with British Oxygen. In 1940, she was Secretary of the Knightswood Branch of the CP, employed at Barr and Stroud engineering company and a member of the T&G. Tall and striking, she spoke

HUNTER, Anne

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regularly at lunch-time factory meetings, where she met James Hunter (b. 1921), also a Communist. They married in 1946. Margaret Hunter became a full-time secretary for the CP in Glasgow, standing in Dalmarnock ward in local elections in 1947 and 1949. In the 1950s she became a CPGB Scottish organiser, part of the Scottish Secretariat. She helped organise the Party’s 1958 celebrations to mark the bi-centenary of the birth of Robert Burns. She also stood in the Gorbals in the 1964 and 1966 General Elections. In 1964, she became party National Women’s Officer, campaigning on women’s issues, sitting on the NEC, organising weekend schools and co-ordinating the work of the Women’s Advisory Committee. On a delegation to the GDR, she became seriously ill and her political career was cut short. nr • Univ. of Manchester, Communist Party Archive: Communist Party publications: Women Today, 1950s; Comment, 1960s/70s. Author interviews for SOHC: Pat Milligan, 1994; James Hunter, 1995. *ODNB (2004); Rafeek, N. C. (2008) Communist Women in Scotland: Red Clydeside from the Russian Revolution to the end of the Soviet Union. HUNTER, Maureen Hunter McVeigh (Mollie), m. McIlwraith, born Longniddry, East Lothian 30 June

1922, died Inverness 31 July 2012. Writer. Daughter of Helen Eliza Smeaton Waitt, and William George McVeigh. Mollie Hunter was a popular and influential writer of fiction for children and young adults. Largely self-educated, she left school at 14 to work in an Edinburgh flower shop, attending night school and studying at the National Library of Scotland at the same time. Heavily influenced by her father, who died when she was nine, she was determined to master the language, history and culture of Scotland and to pass these on to her own children and children everywhere. She married Thomas (Mike) McIlwraith in 1940 and they had two sons. Her work includes fantasy, historical fiction and realism. All but one of her children’s books are set in Scotland. She won the Carnegie Medal in 1974 for The Stronghold, a story of life and death in a prehistoric Orkney broch, a Boston Globe-Horn Book Honour Award in 1976 for A Stranger Came Ashore, set in Shetland, and a Phoenix Award in 1992 for A Sound of Chariots. She also produced two books of non-fiction essays on the craft of writing, in particular on writing

for children, writing historical fiction and being a Scottish writer. MF • NLS: Acc. 12792, also 11073 and 11993, Papers of Mollie Hunter. Hunter, M., Works as above, and see Greenway (1998); Hunter, M. (1989) Something about the Author (autobiography). Greenway, B. (1998) A Stranger Shore: a critical introduction to the works of Mollie Hunter; The Scotsman, 7 Aug. 2012 (obit.). HUNTLY, Henrietta, Countess of see STEWART, Henrietta, Countess of Huntly (1573–1642) HURD, Dorothy Iona,‡ n. Campbell, m1 Hurd, m2 Howe, born Edinburgh 24 March 1883, died

Yemassee, South Carolina 20 March 1945. Amateur golfer. Daughter of Emily Mary Tipper, and William Campbell, metal merchant. Dorothy Campbell claimed she was ‘an entirely self-taught golfer’ (Holme 1925, p. 28). One of nine siblings, at age 5 she was playing against her older sisters. She joined North Berwick Ladies’ Golf Club aged 13, and had a handicap of nine. Her father died when she was 16, and she and her mother moved to North Berwick. In June 1903, she played in the inaugural Scottish Ladies Championship, held at St Andrews, reaching the semi-finals. The founding of the Championship and then the SLGA in 1904 owes much to London-born Agnes Grainger (fl. 1900s) of the St Rule Club: having seen Scotland beaten at Deal in 1902, she realised that Scottish golfers needed wider match-play experience to compete internationally. Dorothy Campbell was many times a champion in women’s amateur golf, with wins in the Ladies’ Championships of Scotland, Britain, America and Canada (1905–1912). She represented Scotland internationally seven times and Britain twice. Her style of play ‘was unmistakably North Berwick’ and she was said to possess ‘a wonderful and most useful calm, unruffled temperament’ (Stringer 1945, p. 41). Throughout her career, her mashie ‘Thomas’ and her putter ‘Stella’ were among her favoured clubs. In 1910 she moved to Canada, then to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in 1913, when she married Jack V. Hurd. The couple had one son but divorced in 1923. Dorothy Campbell Hurd, in semi-retirement since her marriage, returned to amateur competition in 1924 having spent ten months transforming her grip and swing. Aged 41, she was the unexpected, and oldest, winner of the US Ladies’ Championship. She returned to Scotland to play several times. Her

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second marriage, to Edward Howe (1937), ended in divorce in 1943, and she died accidentally in 1945, falling under a train. With ten national titles, Dorothy Campbell Hurd was ‘the first woman to dominate international golf ’ (World Golf Hall of Fame Profile: www.wgv.com; inducted 1978). IAR

fifth Dundonian woman to be given the Freedom of the City. She was hard-working and serious: ‘You won’t find Miss Husband ’midst the gay and giddy throng . . . but you will find her where distress is . . .’ the ILP paper The Tocsin commented (April 1909, p. 8). imh

• Minutes of the St Rule Ladies’ Golf Club. Dey, J. (1934) ‘The amateur golfer’, in S. Baddiel (1990) Golf – The Golden Years, pp. 82–6; Dunlop-Hill, N. (1930) History of the Scottish Ladies’ Golfing Association 1903–1928; George, J. (2003) ‘Women and golf in Scotland’, PhD, Univ. of Edinburgh; Holme, E. (1925) The Best of Golf; Julius, M. E. (1998) For the Good of Golf and St Andrews: the St Rule Club, 1898–1998; ODNB (2004) (see Campbell, Dorothy); Stringer, M. (1924) Golfing Reminiscences; Stringer, M. E. (1945) ‘Mrs Edward Howe (Dorothy Campbell Hurd)’, Personal News Service, F & H 1945, p. 41. www.kirkwood. co.uk; www.golfjournal.org/greatamateur; www.usamateur. org/history/records; www.wgv.com; www.north-berwick.co.uk

• Dundee City Archives: Dundee Council minutes and Corporation diaries. AGC; DWT; Whatley, C. (ed.) (1992) The Remaking of Juteopolis: Dundee circa 1891–1991. HUTCHISON, Isabel Wylie,‡

born Tayport 20 May 1852, died Dundee 30 April 1929. Councillor, social reformer, suffragist. Daughter of Agnes Lamond (or Lomand), and John Husband, master mariner. Agnes Husband ran a dressmaking business in Murraygate, Dundee, with her sister Kitty (Catherine Husband, 1853–1940). An early and prominent member of the ILP, she was, after several unsuccessful efforts, one of the first two women elected to Dundee Parish Council in 1901 (with *Mary Lily Walker), where she served conscientiously until 1928. She pressed for a more humane approach to the poor, through both the council and Dundee Social Union. Elected to the Dundee School Board in 1905, she championed better care and education for children, arguing for free school books and meals, and was a pioneer in the nursery schools movement. She also worked on the Dundee Distress Committee (as convener), the Dundee Insurance Committee and at least five other committees concerned with health, education and young people. In 1904, she participated in the inaugural meeting of Dundee WSS. She joined the WSPU in 1906 but three years later became president of Dundee WFL and a member of the national executive. Asserting the claims of women and their competence to participate in the administration of public affairs, she saw more women on the council as an effective way of promoting women’s suffrage. She influenced many of Dundee’s younger suffragettes and was keen to include working-class women. After the First World War she was on the executive of DWCA. In 1926, she was the

HUSBAND, Ann (Agnes),

born Carlowrie, Kirkliston, 30 May 1889, died Carlowrie 20 Feb. 1982. Writer, Arctic traveller, botanist. Daughter of Jean Wylie, and Thomas Hutchison, wine merchant. The third in a family of five, Isabel Hutchison was taught at home by governesses and at Miss Gamgee’s School (later Rothesay House) in Edinburgh, where she excelled in botany. Shy and introspective, she composed poems on long, solitary walks. Her first poems were accepted for publication in 1911, winning for her prizes and recognition. In 1924 Isabel Hutchison visited Iceland where she made a difficult and celebrated walk across the island; her article about Iceland in the National Geographic Magazine began a long association with the country. She then visited Greenland as a plant collector; she returned twice more and spent a year in a village north of the Arctic Circle. In 1933, she travelled around the north coast of Alaska in small trading vessels, completing the journey by dog-team at the Arctic village of Aklavik on the Mackenzie River in Canada. On her final northern trip in 1937, she travelled to the Aleutian Islands, reaching Attu at the farthest end of the archipelago, and also to the Pribiloff Islands in Bering Strait. On these journeys she collected plants for the RHS, the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew and Edinburgh, and the BM. She also brought back native artefacts for the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology at Cambridge and the RSM. In addition to six books of poetry, including two verse dramas, she wrote four books on her northern travels and contributed articles to a wide range of journals and newspapers, some in French and Gaelic. She was also proficient in Danish, German and Italian, and during her stay in Greenland learned enough of the native language to get by. Employed as a censor during the Second World War, she was a frequent broadcaster and lectured on her northern travels throughout Britain. She also exhibited water-colour landscapes at the

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RSA. She was awarded the Mungo Park medal by the Royal Scottish Geographical Society in 1935, the Danish Freedom Medal in 1946 and the honorary degree of LLD by the University of St Andrews in 1949. After the war, Isabel Hutchison continued to write for the National Geographic Magazine, including accounts of three ‘strolls’ across the length of Britain and over the Brenner Pass from Innsbruck to Venice – in her sixties with a knapsack on her back. With her sister, Hilda Hutchison (1892–1979), who had earned her doctorate of music at the Sorbonne, she spent her declining years at Carlowrie, the home in which they were born. gh

Stamford Hall, Loughborough. From 1979 to 1983, she was SCWG national president, travelling to international conferences in Moscow and Germany. She stood six times as a Labour Party candidate in Portobello in the local elections. She gave credit to the SCWG: ‘I know I have had a very interesting life because of the Co-operative movement. If I had never joined the Women’s Guild, I would have had a much poorer life’. The Guilds in Scotland were organised in local sections. Presidents of the East of Scotland regional section (IV) of the SCWG included Annie (Nan) Sutherland, (1913–98, president 1972–6) and Ella Williamson, (1916–2000, president 1986–8), both of whom, like Mary Hutchison, have left recorded memories in the People’s Story Museum Archive Edinburgh. hec

• NLS: Acc. 4775, 8138, 9713, Papers, diaries and corr. of Isabel Wylie Hutchison. Hutchison, I. (1923) Original Companions, (1930) On Greenland’s Closed Shore, (1934) North to the Rime-Ringed Sun, (1935) Arctic Nights’ Entertainments, (1937) Stepping Stones from Alaska to Asia. Hoyle, G. (2001) Flowers in the Snow: the life of Isabel Wylie Hutchison; Tiltman, M. H. (1935) Women in Modern Adventure.

• PSMOHA: Mary Hutchison T 22a/87; Ella Williamson T15/87; Nan Sutherland T11/87.

n. Casey, born Edinburgh 18 Jan. 1915, died Edinburgh 1 Oct. 1994. National president, Scottish Co-operative Women’s Guild. Daughter of Catherine Sinclair, printer’s machinist, and Michael Casey, confectioner. One of three girls, Mary Casey grew up in the south side of Edinburgh. After leaving school she worked as an upholsterer. In 1938, she married Laurence Hutchison, a foreman joiner, and they had three daughters. She joined the Craigmillar Branch of the SCWG in the early 1960s, and found that the Guild offered opportunities not available elsewhere for the education and selfdevelopment of working women. Mary Hutchison attended classes in business procedure run by the SCWG, and, in response to local demand, started a youth club with the support of the St Cuthbert’s Co-operative Association Education Committee, which paid for her training in youth work. She won a scholarship to attend the Co-operative College at

HUTCHISON, Mary,

HUTTON, Sibilla (Sibbie), born before 1773, died Edinburgh 1808. Milliner and shopkeeper. Daughter of Sibilla Tunnock, brewer’s daughter, and the Rev. William Hutton, Secession minister in Dalkeith. A well-known Edinburgh shopkeeper, portrayed twice in Kay’s Original Portraits, Sibilla Hutton had a shop in the Royal Exchange. This building housed several shops and a coffee house. She advertised in Edinburgh newspapers, travelled to London to buy goods and make contacts, and attended law courts personally to pursue clients’ bills. Her sister Nellie (Mrs Kidd) had a ‘Haberdashery and Millinery Warehouse’ in Princes Street; in 1785 she intimated she ‘boarded young ladies as well as carrying on her other b­ usiness’ (Edinburgh Evening Courant, December 1785). Sibilla Hutton set up in London in 1790, but later returned to Edinburgh. The Scots Magazine recorded her death. She exemplified the single woman of ­professional background who ran her own ­business to earn her living. ecs

• Kay, J. (1878 edn.) A Series of Original Portraits and Caricature Etchings; *ODNB (2004); WWEE (Bibl.).

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I INGIBJORG (‘mother of earls’, jarlamó∂ir), Queen of Scotland, Countess of Orkney, fl. c. 1025–58 (?).

Daughter of Bergliot daughter of Halvdan, and Finn Arnesson of Giske. Ingibjorg was probably born on Giske, an island in Romsdal Fjord, west Norway. Most of her family were strong supporters of Olaf Haraldsson (St Olaf ) in his struggle to maintain power in Norway. He was the brother of Ingibjorg’s grandfather, Halvdan son of Sigurd Syr. Olaf probably arranged her marriage to Earl Thorfinn of Orkney, in the late 1020s, to help tie the Earl into his circle. Thorfinn and Ingibjorg named their eldest son Paul, the first Christian name in the earldom family, perhaps reflecting a commitment to the new religion. The comment in Orkneyinga Saga that the Earl loved Paul and his brother Erlend dearly is unusual, suggesting a close family relationship. So does the remarkable story of Thorfinn’s flight from his burning house, when he broke through a wooden partition wall and is credited with having escaped ‘carrying his wife Ingibjorg in his arms’ (Palsson and Edwards 1978, Ch. 28), a rare personal detail. According to the saga, after Thorfinn’s death Ingibjorg married Malcolm III of Scotland (r. 1058–93), and bore a son, Duncan. Duncan’s legitimacy has been doubted – a later chronicler refers to him as a bastard. However, he was important enough to be taken as a hostage to England by King William (the Conqueror) after William’s 1072 expedition to Scotland. The absence of any other record of the marriage must reflect the fact that Malcolm’s second marriage, to *Margaret (later Saint Margaret), established the medieval Scottish royal line. It has been questioned whether Ingibjorg’s marriage to Malcolm was possible, and there has been unwarranted surmise that it must have been Thorfinn’s daughter, rather than his widow, who was meant. Ingibjorg may also have borne Donald, mentioned in one Irish source as Malcolm’s son. In 1066, the earls Paul and Erlend Thorfinsson joined Harald Hardraada’s army. They survived his defeat at Stamford Bridge and returned to Orkney. After William’s victory at Hastings, the survivors of the Anglo-Saxon royal house fled to Scotland. Malcolm decided to marry Margaret in 1070/1,

and it is unclear whether Ingibjorg died or was put aside in favour of Margaret. She was certainly eclipsed as Scottish queen by her saintly successor. In the Durham martyrology she is commemorated as Ingeberga comitissa (Countess Ingibjorg), perhaps in pious remembrance by either Malcolm or their son Duncan. Her designation as Countess in this source may also suggest that her marriage to Malcolm was not recognised as completely regular. The chronology has recently been revised and a much earlier date has been proposed for Ingibjorg’s marriage to Malcolm and for her death, which may have occurred in 1058. Another significant factor which has been highlighted is that she is primarily referred to as jarlamó∂ir (‘mother of earls’) in Norse sources. This suggests that she may have had responsibility for the care of her two sons, Paul and Erlend, who were minors after the death of their father, Thorfinn, which occurred possibly a decade earlier than the traditional date of 1065. BEC • Palsson, H. and Edwards, P. G. (trans.) (1978) Orkneyinga Saga. Crawford, B. E. (2014) The Northern Earldoms; Duncan, A. A. M. (2003) Kingship of the Scots, Ch. 3; W. P. L. Thomson (2012) ‘Ingibjorg jarlamó∂ir’, Northern Studies, 43, pp. 26–39.

born Naini Tal, India 16 August 1864, died Newcastle upon Tyne 26 Nov. 1917. Doctor, pioneer of *Scottish Women’s Hospitals abroad. Daughter of Harriet Thompson, and John Forbes Inglis, magistrate. Elsie Inglis, second daughter and seventh child, spent her childhood in India and Tasmania, before the family settled in Edinburgh in 1878. Educated there and in Paris, for a time she stayed at home to help her father, to whom she was devoted; his death in 1894 devastated her. In 1886 it became possible to attend, as a home student, the Edinburgh School of Medicine for Women founded by *Sophia Jex-Blake, from whom, however, Elsie Inglis and others soon parted company. After further study in Glasgow, in 1892 she gained the Triple Qualification Licentiateship of the Royal Colleges of Physicians and Surgeons of Edinburgh and the Faculty of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow. After working as house surgeon in the Elizabeth Garrett Anderson Hospital for Women in London, and gaining midwifery experience at

INGLIS, Elsie Maude,

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the world-famous Rotunda Hospital in Dublin, Elsie Inglis set up medical practice in Edinburgh in 1894, in partnership with Jessie McGregor (d. US 1906; MBChM 1896, MD 1899 with gold medal). Jessie McGregor was elected a Fellow of the Edinburgh Obstetrical Society in 1901 and emigrated to America in 1905. Elsie Inglis went on in 1899 to acquire her MBChM from the University of Edinburgh, now that it was open to women. She lectured on gynaecology in the Edinburgh Medical College for Women, which she had helped found, and travelled to Vienna and the USA to gain further experience. Back in Edinburgh, she established the Hospice in the High Street, a nursing home and maternity centre: within five years it was a recognised training centre for midwives. (Women could not yet take posts in the Edinburgh Maternity Hospital.) By 1910, the Hospice was amalgamated with the Bruntsfield Hospital for Women and Children, under her direction. Elsie Inglis’s medical reputation might have rested solely on the care of women and children, but the First World War brought a new challenge. Not satisfied with her role as Commandant of the 6th Edinburgh VAD, she approached the authorities with plans for incorporating women into the RAMC. Her initial offer to serve as a surgeon was declined by the War Office – she was told: ‘My good lady, go home and sit still’ (Lawrence 1971, pp. 97–8). She then proposed setting up hospitals staffed fully by women, a project supported by the SFWSS. The *Scottish Women’s Hospitals for Home and Foreign Service movement played a key role in wartime medical services. Lacking support at home, the women offered their services to the Allies, and hospitals were quickly established in France, Greece and Serbia, eventually gaining support from the Admiralty and Foreign Office. Elsie Inglis visited the hospital at Royaumont in France before travelling in spring 1915 to Kragujevac in Serbia, where she remained for some months, until her unit was imprisoned following the Serbian retreat. After her release, she returned to Scotland, and agreed to set up a hospital in Russia. She had barely arrived in Dobrudja in Romania when the Allies were forced into retreat, and her hospital was handed over to the Russian Red Cross at Reni. Elsie Inglis remained there before rejoining the Serbian division in autumn 1916. During most of her time in these centres, she had to cope with the effects of endemic disease and recurrent outbreaks of typhoid, as well as primitive conditions and the difficulty of obtaining adequate

medical supplies. She herself became increasingly ill during 1917, but survived a hazardous journey back from Odessa, only to succumb the day after arriving at Newcastle. Her body lay in state in St Giles’ in Edinburgh, and British and Serbian royalty attended her funeral. She had been awarded the Serbian Order of the White Eagle (First Class) in 1916, a mark of the esteem in which she was held by the Serbs, whose cause she consistently supported. As well as for her war work, Elsie Inglis is remembered for her contribution to the health of women and children, for which the Elsie Inglis Memorial Maternity Hospital, opened in 1925 (now closed), is a visible memorial. She was also prominent in the campaign for female suffrage, being a member of the NUWSS, and for a while secretary of the SFSS, and in Liberal politics, as Vice-President of the Central Edinburgh Women’s Liberal Association and a convinced Home Ruler. Having campaigned for equal opportunities for male and female students, she helped found Muir Hall of residence for female students at the University of Edinburgh. She was also one of the five women graduates who took their case for the University vote through the courts and to the House of Lords in 1908 (see *Chrystal Macmillan). A confident and inspiring figure, Elsie Inglis needed all her considerable determination to enter the unwelcoming male-dominated world of medicine. Her obituary in the BMJ (1917) described her as a ‘born leader, entirely patriotic and free from self-seeking’. In 2009, her image appeared on the £50 note issued by the Clydesdale Bank. HMD • Mitchell Library, Glasgow: Papers of the Scottish Women’s Hospitals for Home and Foreign Service movement, deposit 1922. Balfour, F. (1918) Dr Elsie Maude Inglis; BMJ, 1 Dec. 1917 (obit.); Cahill, A. F. (ed.) (1999) Between the Lines: letters and diaries from Elsie Inglis’s Russian Unit; Crofton, E. (1997) The Women of Royaumont; Knox, W. W. J. (2006) The Lives of Scottish Women; Lawrence, M. (1971) Shadow of Swords: a biography of Elsie Inglis; Leneman, L. (1994) In the Service of Life, (1998) Elsie Inglis; McLaren, E. S. (ed.) (1919) A History of the Scottish Women’s Hospitals; ODNB (2004); www.scottishwomenshospitals.co.uk INGLIS, Esther, n. Langlois [m. Kello],‡

born Dieppe? c. 1569, died Leith 30 Aug. 1624. Calligrapher. Daughter of Marie Presot, calligrapher, and Nicholas Langlois, schoolmaster. Esther Inglis may have been born in Dieppe; she styles herself ‘French daughter of Dieppe’ in an early manuscript. Her Huguenot parents fled 211

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to London from France c. 1569, before moving to Edinburgh, where her father was Master of the French School (1580–1611), under King James VI’s patronage. Esther Langlois was probably trained by her mother, an accomplished calligrapher. She married Bartholomew Kello (d. 1631), a clergyman, c. 1596, but from at least 1604 used an anglicised form of her maiden name professionally (Langlois = English: Inglis). Bartholomew Kello was appointed Clerk of passports and other foreign correspondence under James VI, and the warrant conferring this position, suggests that Esther Inglis made fair copies for him. She was by then producing calligraphic manuscripts of her own, containing specimens of writing styles, as in a 1591 New Year’s gift to Elizabeth I, Discours de la Foy. Texts in later gift-books are drawn from the Bible (Psalms, Proverbs, and Ecclesiastes), or French religious poetry. In 1599 she presented books to Elizabeth I and to Prince Maurice of Nassau, the Earl of Essex, and Anthony Bacon. Bartholomew Kello may have been engaged in the secret negotiations for James’s succession to the English throne, husband and wife working together within the political patronage network. The couple apparently moved to London with King James’s court c. 1604. Esther Inglis lived there and in Essex, where her husband had a clerical post, returning to Scotland c. 1615. In further appeals for patronage, she presented manuscripts to Prince Henry, *Queen Anna, and their circles. Around 1605 Esther Inglis began to use coloured flowers from pattern books in addition to her more usual black-and-white style copied from printed books. In 1624, she gave Prince Charles an elaborate manuscript of 50 Emblemes Chrestiens, based on Georgette de Montenay’s printed work. She often included self-portraits in her books, and embroidered some of their bindings. Four of her six children survived to adulthood, Samuel succeeding his father as rector of Spexhall, Suffolk. About sixty-three calligraphic manuscripts by Esther Inglis are known to exist, fifteen of them in Scottish libraries. GZ • NLS: MSS 2197, 8874, 20498, 25240; Acc. 7633, 11624, 11821; NRS: GD 18/4508; Univ. of Edinburgh Library: MS La.III 75, 249, 439, 440, 522. Beal, P. (2013) Catalogue of English Literary Manuscripts ­1450–1700 www.celm-ms.org.uk; Bracher, T. (2004) ‘Esther Inglis and the English succession crisis of 1599’ in J. Daybell (ed.) Women and Politics in Early Modern England; Frye, S. (2002) ‘Materializing authorship in Esther Inglis’s Books’, Jour. Medieval and Modern Studies, 32, pp. 469–91;

Jackson, D. J. (1937) Esther Inglis, Calligrapher 1571–1624; Laing, D. (1865–6) ‘Notes relating to Mrs Esther Inglis’, Proc. Soc. Antiquaries Scot., 6; ODNB (2004); Ross, S. G. (2009) ‘Esther Inglis: linguist, calligrapher, miniaturist, and Christian humanist’ in J. D. Campbell and A. R. Larsen (eds) Early Modern Women and Transnational Communities of Letters; Scott-Elliot, A. H. and Yeo, E. (1990) ‘Calligraphic manuscripts of Esther Inglis . . . a catalogue’, Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 84, 1; Tjan-Bakker, A. (2000) ‘Dame Flora’s blossoms: Esther Inglis’s flower-illustrated manuscripts’, in P. Beal and M. J. M. Ezell (eds) English Manuscript Studies, 9; Ziegler, G. (2000) ‘“More than feminine boldness”: the gift books of Esther Inglis’, in M. E. Burke et al. (eds) Women, Writing and the Reproduction of Culture. INGLIS CLARK, Jane Isabella (Janie), n. Shannon,

born 1859/60, possibly abroad, died Edinburgh 9 March 1950. Rock climber and mountaineer, co-founder of the Ladies Scottish Climbing Club. Daughter of Isabella Struthers Wilson, and David Shannon, tea planter. Married in 1884 to Dr William Inglis Clark (1856–1932) and living in Edinburgh, Jane Shannon had always been ‘a good walker and enthusiastic hill lover’ (Inglis Clark 1938, p. 26) but did not begin rock climbing until 1897. She found that she possessed a natural aptitude for difficult routes, demonstrated by her subsequent participation in six first ascents of Ben Nevis between 1897 and 1904, as well as many other climbs made in Scotland with her husband and leading male exponents of the day. She also climbed and ski-toured for several seasons in the Swiss Alps, the Dolomites and Tyrol. The idea of a climbing club exclusively for women had long been in her mind, but became a realistic proposition when her daughter, Mabel Jeffrey (1885–1967), was old enough to be her ‘lieutenant’ (Inglis Clark 1929, p. 6). The Inglis Clarks’ two children had been encouraged to climb, and Mabel gathered climbing friends around her. With family friend Lucy Smith (d. 1970), daughter of Edinburgh lawyer William C. Smith, mother and daughter founded the LSCC in 1908, the first of its kind to promote independent climbing for women. During the First World War, Jane Inglis Clark was VAD Commandant (Red Cross). A parish and county councillor in Edinburgh (1919–38), she was also a JP. In later years, she saw women’s increased participation in mountaineering as indicative of the broader movement to emancipation, and was proud of her role as a pioneer. Pictures and Memories (1938) indicates her belief in 212

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women’s capabilities and right to self-fulfilment. A memorial hut for climbers in Allt a’Mhuillinn, Coire Leis, Ben Nevis commemorates the Inglis Clarks’ son Charles, who died in the First World War. cao • Alpine Club Archives, London: G25 Ladies’ Alpine Club, application form and climbing lists (1924). Inglis Clark, J. (1929) ‘The Club in Early Days: 1908–1914’, LSCC Jour., 1, pp. 5–9, (1938) ‘Second Ascent of Abraham’s Route’ LSCC Jour., 2, pp. 24–6, (1938) Pictures and Memories. Glover, G. T. (1933) ‘In Memoriam William Inglis Clark’, Scot. Mountaineering Club Jour., 20, 115, pp. 3–7. INNES, Susan (Sue, Susie),‡

born Weymouth, Dorset 4 May 1948, died Edinburgh 24 Feb. 2005. Journalist, writer, editor, historian, artist, feminist campaigner. Daughter of Jean Corbin, housewife, and Alec Innes, professional gardener. Sue Innes was raised in North Wales, then in her father’s home town of Peterhead, by loving parents who belonged to a strict Christian sect. She was an academically gifted student at primary school and at Peterhead Academy, but rebelled in spectacular style in the late 1960s, giving up art school in Aberdeen to travel to San Francisco at the height of the hippy movement. In 1970, she returned to the University of St Andrews, and immediately emerged as a key figure in the second-wave feminist movement, editing the university newspaper Aien and ­beginning her lifelong ­partnership with John (later Jo) Clifford, who became one of Scotland’s leading playwrights. They had two daughters, both surnamed Innes. After graduation, Sue Innes worked as a freelance journalist, mainly for BBC Radio Scotland, Focus on Social Work and Service in Scotland and The Scotsman. From 1988 to 1995, she edited Scotland On Sunday’s Living section, then wrote a regular weekly column on women’s affairs. In 1993 she returned to academic life, graduating from the University of Edinburgh with a PhD (1998) combining politics, history and sociology, and publishing her book Making It Work (1995). In the last decade of her life, she taught at the University of Glasgow, was research fellow at Glasgow Caledonian University, official reporter in the newly re-established Scottish Parliament, and was appointed R&D worker for Scottish women’s organisation Engender. In one of her final projects, she became a passionately committed founding editor of this dictionary, which is dedicated to her memory. JM c M

• NLS MS: Acc. 12633 Papers of Dr Sue Innes.  Innes, S. (1995) Making It Work: women, change and challenge in the 90s. The Herald, 8 March 2005, The Independent, 17 March 2005, The Scotsman, 3 March 2005 (obits).

m. Martyn, born Edinburgh 23 March 1813, died Newcastle upon Tyne 27 Dec. 1846. Singer. Daughter of Helen McLagan, and James Inverarity, merchant. Great-niece of the poet Robert Fergusson (Farmer 1947, p.445), Eliza Inverarity studied with tenor Alexander Murray in Edinburgh, and made her debut during one of his concerts in 1829, performing later in other Scottish cities. In 1836, she married the bass Charles T. Martyn. Together they performed in England and Scotland in operatic productions; Eliza was successful as Amina, the sleepwalking heroine in Bellini’s La Sonnambula (1838). Both signed contracts to visit the USA with the Touring John Templeton Opera Company and Eliza Inverarity attracted attention for her performances as Leonora in Beethoven’s Fidelio in New York (1839). Like many other popular singers of her day, she composed chamber songs and ballads, probably presented during special gala events, benefits, or in the drawing rooms of the wealthy. Her career ended with her premature death from tuberculosis. pac INVERARITY, Eliza,

• Cohen, A. I. (1987, 2nd edn.) International Encyclopedia of Women Composers; Crawford, R. (ed.) (1997) Robert Burns and Cultural Authority; Farmer, H. G. (1947) A History of Music in Scotland; ODNB (2004); Smith, S. G. (1952) Robert Fergusson, 1770–1774, Essays by Various Hands; Stern, G. (1978) Women Composers. IRVINE, Jessie Seymour, born Dunnottar, Kincardineshire, 26 July 1836, died Aberdeen 2 Sept. 1887. Reputedly hymn tune composer. Daughter of Jessie Nicol, and Alexander Irvine, minister of Crimond, Aberdeenshire. Jessie Irvine was possibly the composer of the tune ‘Crimond’, made famous by Sir Hugh Roberton and the Glasgow Orpheus Choir as a setting for Psalm 23. In many books, the tune appears as ‘melody attributed to Jessie Seymour Irvine’, although when it first appeared in William Carnie’s The Northern Psalter and Hymn Tune Book (1872), it was attributed to David Grant (1833–93). In 1911, Jessie Irvine’s sister Anna claimed that the tune had been written by her sister and that David Grant had only harmonised it, but her recollection was disputed by others. The matter is still in some doubt, though Sir Ronald Johnson (1988) came

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down firmly in favour of Grant, after assessing the evidence, as had Barkley (1979). jrw • Barkley, J. M. (1979) Handbook to the Church Hymnary; CDH; Johnson, R. (1988) ‘How far is it to Crimond?’, Bulletin of the Hymn Society, 12, 3, pp. 38–42; Scott, H. (1926) Fasti Ecclesiae Scoticanae ; Wyness, J. F. (1958) ‘Crimond’ –The Full Story of a Psalm Tune Controversy. IRWIN, Margaret Hardinge, CBE, born at sea, 13 Jan. 1858 (registered Broughty Ferry), died Glasgow 21 Jan. 1940. Trade union and suffrage activist. Daughter of Margaret Hunter Cappon, and Captain James Ritchie Irwin, master mariner. An only child, Margaret Irwin was educated privately and at the University of St Andrews (LLA 1880), having studied German, French and English Literature. Moving to Glasgow, she attended classes at Glasgow School of Art and studied political economy at Queen Margaret College. In 1891 she began her lifetime’s work on improving working women’s conditions, probably influenced by early experience in the Dundee area with its poor living conditions, large female workforce and active labour movement. She became full-time organising secretary of the Women’s Protective and Provident League, a philanthropic organisation sponsored by Glasgow Trades Council, and in 1895 Secretary of its offshoot, the Glasgow, then the Scottish, Council for Women’s Trades (SCWT). In both these associations, Margaret Irwin ­acknowledged the contribution of Anna Lindsay n. Dunlop (1845–1903), already an active campaigner for women’s education, as being ‘the mainspring of the whole [Women’s Industrial] Movement’, tirelessly handing committee work (quoted ODNB, Lindsay, 2004). As Assistant Commissioner to the Royal Commission on Labour, Margaret Irwin provided detailed reports on women’s working conditions, for example in laundries, shops, tailoring and sweated trades, published by SCWT and welcomed by the trades councils. Women’s participation at their conferences greatly increased. By 1895, the SCWT represented 100,000 members affiliated to 16 trades councils. She was a driving force on the STUC provisional committee, becoming Secretary two months after its inauguration in March 1897. This was described as ‘a stroke of great good fortune for the fledgling congress’ (Aitken 1997, p. 7). Although never a trade union member, she was recognised as a leading authority on women workers, possessing an unrivalled knowledge of industrial organisation that was used

to advantage in STUC deputations to Parliament and in committee procedures and reports. An active member of GWSAWS, her first motion at the first STUC Congress in 1897 was on women’s suffrage. She resigned as STUC Secretary in 1900 but continued as SCWT delegate until 1910. She was particularly concerned with women’s exploitation in homeworking, an area she called ‘terra incognita’, toiling alone up dilapidated tenement stairs to discover the slum housing conditions of women working for a pittance, and their families. She reported on the differences between English and Scots women textile workers at the Women’s Industrial Council in London. In 1910, she gave evidence to the Select Committee, House of Lords, on closing hours of shops and restaurants, after achieving basic amenities for shop girls of seating and toilet facilities. That year, she initiated a government inquiry into the poor housing of seasonal agricultural workers. In 1918, she designed a model artisan dwelling for Glasgow Corporation health committee, a maquette of which was exhibited by the SCWS. In the 1920s, she wrote articles on women’s work for the Glasgow Herald. She was made CBE in 1927. In her later years she owned and ran a fruit farm in Blairgowrie, Perthshire, employing women in model conditions. She was also active in land settlement schemes and work schemes for unemployed girls. A woman of strong intellect, shrewd, determined and visionary, Margaret Irwin’s contribution to the reform of laws affecting working women was long-lasting. AC a • Univ. of Glasgow Library; Mitchell Library, Glasgow; Gallacher Memorial Library; STUC Archives in GCU research collections (all contain material relating to Margeret Irwin); Keele University Library, Lindsay Papers, Ref. GB 172 LIN (family papers of Anna Lindsay’s son, A. D. Lindsay). Irwin, M. H., Glasgow Herald, 9 July 1918 (Housing), 11 Oct. 1920 (Report to SCWT), 14 Jan. 1921 (Small-holdings for women), 10 Nov. 1921 (Women’s labour), 16 Dec. 1921 (Defence of Trade Boards Act), 14 April 1924 (Work for unemployed girls). Aitken, K. (1997) The Bairns o’ Adam: story of the STUC; Canning, A. (1997) ‘Margaret Irwin’, in Scottish Marxist Voice, Issue 6; Glasgow Herald, 22 Jan. 1940 (obit.); Gordon, E. (1991) Women and the Labour Movement in Scotland 1850– 1914; Lewenhak, S. (1973) ‘Women in the leadership of the STUC 1897–1970’, in Scot. Lab. Hist. Soc. Jour. No. 7, July, (1977) Women and Trade Unions; ODNB (2004) (see Irwin, Margaret and Lindsay, Anna); Tuckett, A. (1986) The Scottish Trades Union Congress: the first 80 years 1897–1977. Private information: Henry McCubbin.

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born c. 1272, died Bergen 1358. Daughter of *Marjorie, Countess of Carrick, and Robert Bruce, 6th Lord of Annandale and Earl of Carrick by right of wife. Isabella Bruce was probably brought up in a cross-border and multicultural environment in the earldom of Carrick and at her father’s estates in England. Her marriage to King Eirik Magnusson of Norway in autumn 1293 is generally seen as a consequence of Eirik’s financial and political claims in Scotland through his daughter *Margaret Maid of Norway (d. 1290). There is limited information about Isabella’s life as queen consort. Her daughter, Ingebjørg, was born in 1297. After Eirik’s death in 1299, Isabella remained in Bergen as a queen dowager. Dower lands provided her with a secure income and in 1324 the bishop of Bergen granted her a lifetime residence on church lands. Her close relationship with the bishopric is evident from her enthusiastic patronage of local churches. Isabella interceded on behalf of ordinary Norwegians with the king and, through her sister *Christian Bruce in Scotland, with Scottish customs officials. Formal relations between Norway and Scotland normalised rapidly after her brother Robert Bruce was crowned in 1306. Her presence in Norway probably served to uphold Scottish–Norse political ties. Extant sources offer glimpses of what was probably an extensive correspondence between her and her family. Her daughter Ingebjørg married and settled in Sweden; widowed in 1318, she died in 1356, two years before her mother. Isabella knew Norse and had an interest in literature. The first and last page of a manuscript of the Old French translation of William of Tyre’s Historia Rerum in Partibus Transmarinis Gestarum contain the following heading in red ink: ‘Liber Domine Isabelle, Dei gratia Regine Norwegie’ – ‘this book belongs to Isabella, by the Grace of God, queen of Norway’. RBW

ISABELLA Bruce, Queen of Norway,

• Bandlien, B. (2018) ‘Dronning Isabellas bok’, in B. Bandlien (ed.) Eufemia. Oslos middelalderdronning; Crawford, B. E. (1990) ‘North Sea kingdoms, North Sea bureaucrat: a royal official who transcended national boundaries’, Scottish Historical Review 69, pp. 175–84; Penman, M. (2014) Robert the Bruce. King of the Scots; Wærdahl, R. B. (2018) ‘A well-adjusted immigrant: Isabella Bruce, queen dowager of Norway, 1299–1358’, in S. Dye et al. (eds) Gender and Mobility in Scotland and Abroad, (2013) ‘Friends or patrons? Powerful go-betweens in the Norwegian Realm in the High Middle Ages’, in T. Småberg and J. V. Sigurðsson (eds) Friendship and Social Networks in Scandinavia c. 1000–1800.

ISABELLA of FIFE see FIFE, Isobel of, Countess of Buchan (c. 1285–c. 1314) ISEABAIL NÍ MHEIC CAILEAN, fl. 1480s–90s, poet. Probably daughter of ISABELLA, COUNTESS OF ARGYLL, born before 1463, died 1510, poet, and

Colin Campbell, 1st Earl of Argyll. Three late fifteenth-century Gaelic poems were most probably written by Iseabail, who married Aonghas Óg (d. 1490), son of John, last hereditary Lord of the Isles, and by her mother Isabella, 1st Countess of Argyll, daughter of John Stewart, Lord of Lorn. Alternatively, Iseabail may have been Countess Isabella’s granddaughter. Iseabail composed two courtly love poems using classical bardic language; only three such dánta grádha survive from Gaelic Scotland. With these poems, ‘Atá Fleasgach ar mo Thí’ (There’s a young man in pursuit of me) and ‘Is Mairg Dá nGalar an Grádh’ (Woe to the one whose sickness is love) she was following a European fashion of the time, imported to Scotland via Ireland. Doubt has been cast on the ascription of these poems and especially of the third extant work, ‘Éistibh a Luchd an Tighe-se’ (Listen, members of this household), to Countess Isabella, due to their subject matter, but these doubts arise from reading the poems as factbased compositions rather than as imaginative poetic exercises. af • An Gàidheal (1871) 1, p. 297; Guth na Bliadhna (1913) 10, p. 346; Kerrigan, C. (1991) An Anthology of Scottish Women Poets, p. 14; MacGregor, M. (1999) ‘“Surely one of the greatest poems ever made in Britain”: The lament for Griogair Ruadh MacGregor of Glen Strae and its historical background’, in E. J. Cowan and D. Gifford (eds) The Polar Twins; Ó Rathille, T. (1984) Dánta Grádha, p. 74; Thomson, D. S. (1983) The Companion to Gaelic Scotland, p. 139; Watson, W. J. (1978) Bàrdachd Albannach O Leabhar Deadhan Liòs-Moir, p. 307. Private information. IURMINBURG,

fl. 672–85. Queen of Bernicia. Iurminburg married Ecgfrith King of Bernicia (670–85), a kingdom which included parts of southern Scotland, after the dissolution of his marriage to *Aeðilthryð, who had retired into monastic life about 672, but before he became king of all Northumbria after 679. St Wilfrid’s supporters blamed her for the souring of his relationship with Ecgfrith, who exiled him in 678 and imprisoned him in 680. They interpreted her serious illness of c. 680 as divine punishment 215

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for having ‘shot poisoned arrows of speech from her quiver into the heart of the king’ (Colgrave, 1927). Fleeting glimpses in the sources of Iurminburg as Queen suggest she involved herself in Bernician (and later Northumbrian) politics. Ecgfrith also benefited diplomatically from her

sister’s marriage to the King of Wessex. She was at Carlisle when she heard of Ecgfrith’s death in battle in Pictland in 685; like other widowed Northumbrian queens, Iurminburg retired to monastic life and became a respected abbess. jef • Colgrave, B. (ed.) (1927) The Life of Bishop Wilfrid.

J JACOB, Violet Augusta Mary Frederica, n. KennedyErskine, born Dun, near Montrose, 1 Sept. 1863,

died Kirriemuir 9 Sept. 1946. Writer and painter. Daughter of Catherine Jones, and William Henry Kennedy-Erskine, 18th Laird of Dun. Violet Kennedy-Erskine was the eldest of three surviving children. Her father died when she was a child, in 1870, and her 16-year-old sister died suddenly and traumatically in 1883. She was raised by her Welsh mother and educated at home, the House of Dun (now NTS), ‘Balnillo House’ in her novel Flemington. Her writing often draws on the history of her ancient, landed family, which she recorded in The Lairds of Dun (1931), and on the landscapes and people of Angus. In 1894, she married Arthur Otway Jacob (1867–1936), an Irishman serving in the British Army. After their son Harry was born in 1895, they spent several years in India with Arthur Jacob’s regiment, a happy period recorded in Violet’s diaries and letters to her mother from Indore State. She nursed in Mhow military hospital but also enjoyed considerable freedom, meeting rulers of the Central Indian States and riding on the plains. Five volumes of her Indian flower paintings are held at the Royal Botanic Garden, Edinburgh. Returning to Britain in 1901, she lived mainly in English garrison towns, apart from a spell in Egypt (1903–4). However, on leave and after retirement, the Jacobs frequently stayed near Llanigon in the Welsh borders. Her first, well-received novel, The Sheepstealers (1902), depicts social unrest in 1840s Wales (the ‘Rebecca riots’). Her Scottish fiction with its vivid Scots dialogue is especially outstanding. The Interloper (1904), set in early 19thcentury Angus, found contemporary success, and John Buchan described the powerful Flemington (1911) as ‘the best Scots romance since The Master of Ballantrae’ (NLS, MS 27416). Flemington depicts personal and political turmoil in ‘this tormented country’ during and after the 1745 Jacobite Rising,

when, as one character remarks: ‘Whiles, it’s no sae easy tellin’ havers frae truth’ (1998 edn., pp. 335, 361). Violet Jacob nursed during the First World War. Her son, Harry, died at the Somme in 1916, aged 20, and after this tragedy she wrote only short prose and poetry. Her poetry was mainly in Scots at this time, drawing on ballad and folksong traditions. The successful Songs of Angus (1915) appealed to exiled Scots, especially soldiers, and three further volumes followed. The Scottish Poems of Violet Jacob (1944) was reprinted several times; various poems have been much anthologised and some set to music. In 1920, she moved to Ludlow in Shropshire, but regularly visited Angus, the setting of Tales of My Own Country (1922) and The Lum Hat and Other Stories (1982). The Jacobs often wintered abroad in the 1930s because of Arthur Jacob’s health. After his death in 1936, she returned to Angus, making her final home at Marywell House, Kirriemuir. ca • Montrose Public Library: David Waterson corr., Archives, MS X/510/8 (13 letters from VJ), letters to James Christison, librarian; NLS: Acc. 9277 and MSS 27411–16 (manuscripts and letters of VJ), MS 26190 (Marion Lochhead file, ff. 234–7, letters (n.d.) to Lochhead, and concerning Jacob’s work), MS 26706 (Helen Cruickshank file, f. 82, poems by VJ); RBGE: 5 vols watercolour paintings by VJ, 4 vols ‘Indian Flowering Plants’, and 1 vol. ‘Indian Convolvuli’. Jacob, V., Works as above and see HSWW (Bibl.). Bing, S. (1993) ‘Autobiography in the work of Violet Jacob’, Chapman 74–5, Autumn/Winter, pp. 98–109; Caird, J. (1984) ‘The poetry of Violet Jacob and Helen Cruickshank’, Cencrastus 19, Winter, pp. 32–4; ECSWW; Gordon, K. H. (2000) ‘Voices from the “cauld east countra”: representations of self in the poetry of Violet Jacob and Marion Angus’, PhD, Glasgow Univ.; HSWW (Bibl.); *ODNB (2004); The Scotsman, 11 Sept. 1946 (obit.). JAFFRAY, Grissel, died Dundee Nov. 1669. Last woman executed as a witch in Dundee.

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for having ‘shot poisoned arrows of speech from her quiver into the heart of the king’ (Colgrave, 1927). Fleeting glimpses in the sources of Iurminburg as Queen suggest she involved herself in Bernician (and later Northumbrian) politics. Ecgfrith also benefited diplomatically from her

sister’s marriage to the King of Wessex. She was at Carlisle when she heard of Ecgfrith’s death in battle in Pictland in 685; like other widowed Northumbrian queens, Iurminburg retired to monastic life and became a respected abbess. jef • Colgrave, B. (ed.) (1927) The Life of Bishop Wilfrid.

J JACOB, Violet Augusta Mary Frederica, n. KennedyErskine, born Dun, near Montrose, 1 Sept. 1863,

died Kirriemuir 9 Sept. 1946. Writer and painter. Daughter of Catherine Jones, and William Henry Kennedy-Erskine, 18th Laird of Dun. Violet Kennedy-Erskine was the eldest of three surviving children. Her father died when she was a child, in 1870, and her 16-year-old sister died suddenly and traumatically in 1883. She was raised by her Welsh mother and educated at home, the House of Dun (now NTS), ‘Balnillo House’ in her novel Flemington. Her writing often draws on the history of her ancient, landed family, which she recorded in The Lairds of Dun (1931), and on the landscapes and people of Angus. In 1894, she married Arthur Otway Jacob (1867–1936), an Irishman serving in the British Army. After their son Harry was born in 1895, they spent several years in India with Arthur Jacob’s regiment, a happy period recorded in Violet’s diaries and letters to her mother from Indore State. She nursed in Mhow military hospital but also enjoyed considerable freedom, meeting rulers of the Central Indian States and riding on the plains. Five volumes of her Indian flower paintings are held at the Royal Botanic Garden, Edinburgh. Returning to Britain in 1901, she lived mainly in English garrison towns, apart from a spell in Egypt (1903–4). However, on leave and after retirement, the Jacobs frequently stayed near Llanigon in the Welsh borders. Her first, well-received novel, The Sheepstealers (1902), depicts social unrest in 1840s Wales (the ‘Rebecca riots’). Her Scottish fiction with its vivid Scots dialogue is especially outstanding. The Interloper (1904), set in early 19thcentury Angus, found contemporary success, and John Buchan described the powerful Flemington (1911) as ‘the best Scots romance since The Master of Ballantrae’ (NLS, MS 27416). Flemington depicts personal and political turmoil in ‘this tormented country’ during and after the 1745 Jacobite Rising,

when, as one character remarks: ‘Whiles, it’s no sae easy tellin’ havers frae truth’ (1998 edn., pp. 335, 361). Violet Jacob nursed during the First World War. Her son, Harry, died at the Somme in 1916, aged 20, and after this tragedy she wrote only short prose and poetry. Her poetry was mainly in Scots at this time, drawing on ballad and folksong traditions. The successful Songs of Angus (1915) appealed to exiled Scots, especially soldiers, and three further volumes followed. The Scottish Poems of Violet Jacob (1944) was reprinted several times; various poems have been much anthologised and some set to music. In 1920, she moved to Ludlow in Shropshire, but regularly visited Angus, the setting of Tales of My Own Country (1922) and The Lum Hat and Other Stories (1982). The Jacobs often wintered abroad in the 1930s because of Arthur Jacob’s health. After his death in 1936, she returned to Angus, making her final home at Marywell House, Kirriemuir. ca • Montrose Public Library: David Waterson corr., Archives, MS X/510/8 (13 letters from VJ), letters to James Christison, librarian; NLS: Acc. 9277 and MSS 27411–16 (manuscripts and letters of VJ), MS 26190 (Marion Lochhead file, ff. 234–7, letters (n.d.) to Lochhead, and concerning Jacob’s work), MS 26706 (Helen Cruickshank file, f. 82, poems by VJ); RBGE: 5 vols watercolour paintings by VJ, 4 vols ‘Indian Flowering Plants’, and 1 vol. ‘Indian Convolvuli’. Jacob, V., Works as above and see HSWW (Bibl.). Bing, S. (1993) ‘Autobiography in the work of Violet Jacob’, Chapman 74–5, Autumn/Winter, pp. 98–109; Caird, J. (1984) ‘The poetry of Violet Jacob and Helen Cruickshank’, Cencrastus 19, Winter, pp. 32–4; ECSWW; Gordon, K. H. (2000) ‘Voices from the “cauld east countra”: representations of self in the poetry of Violet Jacob and Marion Angus’, PhD, Glasgow Univ.; HSWW (Bibl.); *ODNB (2004); The Scotsman, 11 Sept. 1946 (obit.). JAFFRAY, Grissel, died Dundee Nov. 1669. Last woman executed as a witch in Dundee.

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Grissel Jaffray married James Butchart, maltman and burgess of Dundee. The Commission for her trial is dated 11 November 1669 and her execution is confirmed by the Council Minute Book entry for 23 November. The following year, Margaret Coul and several others accused of witchcraft were banished, after Grissel Jaffray had denounced them at her execution. Nothing else is known of her, although a later writer (People’s Journal 1904) suggests she may have been Aberdonian and had one son, a skipper in foreign trade. Local legend tells that he sailed in on the day of her execution and when he discovered the source of the smoke and flames visible from the river, turned his ship about and was never seen again. Another legend suggests that James Butchart was also charged with witchcraft in January 1669, held in the Tolbooth and subsequently released. It is known that he was admitted to Dundee’s hospital after Grissel Jaffray’s death. c-mw • Dundee City Archives: Dundee Council Book, VI, 1669–1707; McManus Galleries, Dundee: Stockdale, D. ‘List of Known Cases of Witchcraft in the Dundee Area’, 10 June 1996; NRS: PC1/40 p. 283. DWT ; Larner, K. et al. (1977) A Source Book of Scottish Witchcraft ; People’s Journal, 22 October 1904.

born Sandness, Shetland, 30 June 1864, died Nelson, New Zealand, 23 March 1942. Writer and suffragist. Daughter of Barbara Laing, and Robert Jamieson, schoolmaster. Christina Jamieson was educated in the parish of Sandness on the west coast of Shetland, where her father was the schoolmaster and where she was a pupil-teacher. Unlike her brothers, several of whom became noted academics, she was expected to remain at home. Following the example of her father, a contributor to The Scotsman, she started to write both fiction and factual items about Shetland for several papers, sometimes as ‘John Cranston’. In 1899, after her father’s death, she moved with her mother to Lerwick. In October 1909, she was one of the founding members of the – determinedly non-militant – Shetland Women’s Suffrage Society. As secretary, she negotiated affiliation to the NUWSS and was frequently seen as the public face of the Shetland society, travelling to London to take part in a suffrage procession with a Shetland banner that she had designed. Her approach to suffrage was rooted in the economic and social

JAMIESON, Christina [John Cranston],

c­ onditions of Shetland. She was acutely aware of the plight of Shetland women, the ‘real inhabitants of Shetland’ she argued, ‘who alone maintain continuous life on the isles’ (Jamieson 1991, p. 31). With the men so often away at the fishing, it was women who ran the crofts and such was ‘the general feeling of equality’ that ‘Shetland men as a rule “don’t see why women soodna vot” ’ (ibid., p. 33). She herself believed that the women’s ‘constant industry and self-dependence, their patient, unselfish, faithful rearing of men . . . their high moral and religious character’ (ibid., p. 33), entitled them to the vote. Christina Jamieson was fondly remembered as one of Shetland’s most ‘notable and talented women’ (Sill 1992, p. 4). A member of Lerwick School Board in 1916 and two years later its Chair, she also sat on the county committee on secondary education and the education authority. With her social conscience and an adventurous political streak, she was always willing to aid individuals or groups striving to improve the lot of ordinary people. In later years, like her contemporary *Jessie Saxby, she turned her attention to Shetland folklore, founding the Shetland Folklore Society in 1930. With her nephew Bertie Jamieson, she transcribed and edited extracts from the Kirk Session records of Walls and Sandness, published in two volumes as The Hjaltland Miscellany (1937 and 1939). Seeking relief from asthma, she emigrated to New Zealand in 1935. lca • Shetland Archives, D.1/32: Minute book of the Shetland Women’s Suffrage Society, 1909–19. Jamieson, C. (1991) ‘The Women of Shetland’, New Shetlander, 177, pp. 31–3 (originally published in The Shetland News, 22, 29 Jan. 1910). AGC; ODNB (2004); Sill, R. (1992) ‘Christina Jamieson (1866–1942): a notable Shetlander’, New Shetlander, 179, March, pp. 11–14. JAMIESON, Hilda‡

see FUCHS, Eileen (1920–2013)

JARVIE, Margaret, n. Bolton, born Motherwell 20 Jan. 1928, died Edinburgh 15 April 2004. Swimmer, lecturer in sociology. Daughter of Kate Wardrope, and John Bolton, fishmongers. One of only two women to win all Scottish swimming championship titles from 50 to 1,000 yards, Margaret Bolton, along with her friend *Nancy Riach, was part of Motherwell Ladies’ Relay Team, a top team in Scottish swimming history. From 1944 to 1948 she held Scottish senior titles, breaking the Scottish breaststroke record in

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1945. The Lanarkshire Olympians (2000) featured her and her husband David Jarvie, an engineer, as part of an aquatic team that amassed 4 world, 47 British and 172 Scottish records (1936–60). Margaret Jarvie recalled being lodged with a wealthy family for a gala, thinking ‘Why can my parents not live like this?’ Her sense of political awareness led to her encouraging disadvantaged people into higher education, providing free counselling to prostitutes, working with radical groups at Ruskin College and adopting Colin, one of the earliest non-white adoptions into an all-white family in 1960s Scotland. She lived The Swimming Club philosophy that everyone was equal. A lecturer in sociology, she was a leader in counselling in Scotland and ‘one of the agents of the transition over fifty years of women’s position’ (Counselling in Scotland 2004). GJ • Ballantyne, N. (2000) The Lanarkshire Olympians; ‘Margaret Jarvie’, Counselling in Scotland, Spring 2004 (obit).; The Motherwell Times Centenary Supplement 1883– 1983, 23 June 1983. Private information.

born Hastings, Sussex, 21 Jan. 1840, died Sussex 7 Jan. 1912. Doctor and campaigner for women’s medical training. Daughter of Maria Cubitt, and Thomas Jex-Blake, retired barrister. Educated at home until the age of eight, Sophia Jex-Blake then attended six boarding schools in eight years. Described by a fellow-pupil as ‘excessively clever’ (Roberts 1993, p. 11), she was unhappy with the lack of educational opportunities available to her as a woman. From 1858 she attended Queen’s College, London, qualifying as a teacher, and offered her services free to organisations providing education to impoverished women and children. In 1862, she took a temporary post in Mannheim, Germany, but was unhappy there. Only after ­travelling to America in 1865 did she fall ‘desperately in love with medicine, . . . to an extent I could not have believed possible’ (Todd 1918, p. 183). Refused entry to Harvard because she was a woman, she enrolled at the Women’s Medical College, New York, in March 1868, but returned to Britain soon after, following her father’s death. Still determined to become a doctor, she applied to the University of Edinburgh in March 1869, but was refused entry on the grounds that she was the only female applicant. Undeterred, she recruited four other women, including Helen Evans, later Russel (1834–1903). All four passed the JEX-BLAKE, Sophia Louisa,

matriculation examination and were admitted to the medical school in November, a pivotal moment in women’s history. It was particularly significant since Elizabeth Garrett Anderson had earlier failed to gain admittance to the same school. Two more women, including Mary Anderson Marshall, joined the following year, becoming the ‘septem contra Edinam’, as Sophia Jex-Blake called them. They met hostility both from the male students, in the form of violent demonstrations including the famous ‘riot at Surgeons’ Hall’, and from the professoriate of the university, which effectively barred them from classes and refused to allow them to graduate. Sophia Jex-Blake brought an action of declarator against the university to force it to allow graduation, but the decision was upheld in 1873, bringing to a halt the pioneering campaign at Edinburgh. She continued to work towards her goal, establishing the London School of Medicine for Women in 1874, but was thought too divisive to be its head. She eventually passed the medical degree examination in January 1877 at Berne University, Switzerland, and obtained her licence to practise in May that year. Returning to Edinburgh in the 1880s, she practised privately and founded the Edinburgh Hospital and Dispensary for Women and Children (later the Bruntsfield Hospital). In 1886, she founded the Edinburgh School of Medicine for Women, where she taught classes, also lecturing in midwifery at the School of Medicine of the Royal Colleges. She supported the Russell Gurney Enabling Bill (1876), which allowed medical examination boards to admit women as candidates – an essential step in the registration process, as outlined in the 1858 Medical Act. She wrote several essays in favour of female physicians (see also Jex-Blake 1873), and this combination of theory and practice did much to raise the profile and acceptability of female doctors. She retired to Sussex in 1895, with her long-term friend and colleague Margaret Todd (1859–1918), a Scot who had graduated in 1894 from Sophia Jex-Blake’s Edinburgh School but who now continued her literary career, having published one bestseller, Mona MacLean (1892), under the pseudonym ‘Graham Travers’. Margaret Todd wrote a further three novels and lastly a biography of Sophia Jex-Blake. She shortly afterwards committed suicide. Sophia Jex-Blake provoked strong reactions among her contemporaries, including *Elsie Inglis: she was described by Louisa Martindale as ‘brilliant, hot-tempered and resourceful’ (Bonner 1995, pp. 125–6), precisely the characteristics that 218

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brought success. Others were less ­complimentary: Elizabeth Blackwell saw her as ‘a dangerous woman from her power and want of tact’ (ibid.). Some even blamed her high-profile campaign for the failure at Edinburgh, feeling that a more restrained effort would have brought lasting results. However, her tenacity was undoubtedly crucial in the campaign to gain a place for women in medicine. nrs • NLS: Blackwood Papers (Todd). Jex-Blake, S. (1872) Medical Women: Two Essays, ([1873] 1987) ‘The medical education of women’, in D. Spender (ed.) The Education Papers. women’s quest for equality in Britain, 1850–1912. Bonner, T. N. (1995) To the Ends of the Earth: women’s search for education in medicine ; Finkelstein, D. (2002) The House of Blackwood : author–publisher relations in the Victorian era ; Knox, W. (2006) Lives of Scottish Women; ODNB (2004) (see Blake, Sophia Jex-; also ‘Edinburgh Seven’); Roberts, S. (1993) Sophia Jex-Blake: a woman pioneer in nineteenthcentury medical reform; Somerville, J. M. (2005) ‘Dr Sophia Jex-Blake and the Edinburgh School of Medicine for Women, 1886–1898’, Proc. Roy. Coll. Phys. Edin. 35, pp. 261–7; Sutherland, J. (1988) The Longman Companion to Victorian Fiction; Swenson, K. (1999) ‘Intimate sympathy and self-effacement: writing the life of Sophia Jex-Blake’, a/b: Auto/Biography Studies 14, pp. 222–40; Todd, M. (1918) The Life of Sophia Jex-Blake. Additional information from David Finkelstein.

born England, died Dunbar 15 July 1445. Daughter of Margaret Holland, co-heiress to the earldom of Kent, and John Beaufort, Earl of Somerset. Joan Beaufort married James I (1394–1437) at Southwark in February 1424. The marriage may have been a love-match but was arranged primarily as part of negotiations for James’s release from his eighteen-year English captivity. Joan was well-connected (half-cousin to Henry VI and niece of the bishop of Winchester, later Cardinal Beaufort) but had no right of succession to the English throne: she provided a link to the newly freed Scottish king but could not transmit any rights to her husband or children. Joan was Scotland’s first queen consort for twenty-three years. Her predecessor as first lady of the realm, Isabella, Countess of Lennox (c. 1375–1458) Duchess of Albany, and wife of Murdoch Stewart, Governor of Scotland 1420–4, was last of the native line of Lennox. Following James I’s return and the subsequent downfall of her Albany family in 1424–5, she was imprisoned JOAN Beaufort, Queen of Scotland,

for many years by a king concerned about her influence. Following James’s death in 1437, she was restored to her lands and title, governing Lennox until her death. Joan Beaufort arrived in Scotland at the end of March 1424 and was crowned at Scone on 21 May. She and James had six daughters, including *Margaret Stewart, Dauphine of France, and twin sons, one of whom died in infancy. Evidence of her political activity as consort is slight, limited largely to acts of intercession, but James clearly regarded her as an important ally. He twice arranged for the political community to swear oaths of loyalty to her as his consort, in 1428 and 1435. Loyalty to a queen was assumed to be inseparable from that owed to the king, so the two oaths effectively gave Joan her own identity in government. Following the assassination of James I on 21 February 1437, she played a leading political role for some weeks, but soon returned to a more limited position as guardian of the young king, James II. Intense factionalism saw even this role eroded. In the summer of 1439, Joan married James Stewart of Lorne (d. 1451), with whom she had three sons. Joan and her new husband sought to regain effective custody of King James at Stirling but were captured on 3 August by the captain of Stirling Castle, Alexander Livingston. The Queen was released on 31 August after renouncing custody of her children to Livingston. She and her allies continued to oppose the Livingston faction but with little success, particularly after Livingston’s alliance with the 8th Earl of Douglas in 1443. With her allies under attack, she took refuge in the castle of Dunbar in June 1445, where she died the following month. The focus of opposition to the Douglas-Livingston dominance died with her. fd • Brown, M. (1994) James I, (1998) The Black Douglases; Downie, F. (2006) She is but a Woman: queenship in Scotland, 1424–1463; ODNB (2004) (Bibl.). JOAN of England, Queen of Scotland, born 22 or 24 July 1210, died Havering, Essex, 4 March 1238. Daughter of Isabella of Angoulême and King John I of England; MARGARET of England, Queen of Scotland, born Windsor 2 Oct. 1240, died Cupar 26 or 27 Feb. 1275. Daughter of Eleanor of Provence and Henry III of England. Joan of England spent much of her early life in France, as she was contracted to marry Hugues, later Lord of Lusignan, in 1214; however, he married her mother in 1220. Joan was returned to

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England and married Alexander II (1198–1249) on 19 June 1221. Though Joan’s marriage was important for Anglo-Scottish relations, she seems to have had little influence on political life, due to her youth, childlessness, and perhaps the dominance at court of her mother-in-law *Ermengarde de Beaumont. Joan undertook a pilgrimage to Canterbury in 1237, remained in England and died the following year. Joan of England’s niece, Margaret, married the young Alexander III (1241–86) on 26 December 1251. Her early years in Scotland were unhappy but she maintained a close relationship with her father. She was influential in persuading her father to intervene in Scottish political affairs in 1255. From 1260, Alexander assumed control of the government. The royal couple travelled frequently to England and Margaret gave birth there in 1261, to their first child, Margaret, later Queen of Norway. Two sons followed; their early deaths precipitated a succession crisis when Alexander III died in 1286, and Margaret’s grand-daughter, *Margaret, ‘Maid of Norway’, died in 1290. caa • Duncan, A. A. M. (1975) Scotland: the making of the kingdom; Nelson, J. (2007) ‘Scottish queenship in the thirteenth century’ in B. Weiler et al. (eds) Thirteenth-Century England; Giles, J. A. (ed.) (1853) Matthew Paris’s English History ; ODNB (2004) (see Joan, Queen of Scots).

born Barra 10 Feb. 1886, died Barra 6 March 1963. Gaelic f­ olklorist. Daughter of Catherine McNeil, and Angus Johnston, fisherman. One of eight children, Annie Johnston took an early interest in the culture and traditions of Barra, soaking up stories and songs heard from her mother and talented neighbours. She spent her whole life in Barra, and as a teacher instilled an interest in their folklore in the children of Castlebay school, at a time when the stories of Aesop, the brothers Grimm and Hans Christian Andersen were familiar to school children whose own tradition had equally exciting versions memorised by their own people. Among the collectors who came to her door for information about ‘Celtic’ traditions, becoming increasingly fascinating to the outside world in the early 20th century, were the American Alan Lomax, Dr John Lorne Campbell of Canna, and his wife *Margaret Fay Shaw. Campbell’s recordings of Annie Johnston and her siblings were passed on to the School of Scottish Studies, after 1951, forming a precious part of the archives. Annie Johnston and her brother

JOHNSTON, Anne (Annie),

Calum also contributed to *Marjorie KennedyFraser’s famous three-volume Songs of the Hebrides. Children’s lore, proverbial sayings, bird calls, cradle-songs and representations of other song types might never have been known had it not been for the Johnstons and those who recorded them. Annie Johnston introduced collectors to the ‘waulking song’, a genre unique to Gaelic Scotland, used to accompany the shrinking of homespun cloth by beating it, soaked, on a board. Several women sat around the board, singing songs with a distinctive beat, as a means of regulating the hand movements. Annie Johnston sang them herself, and encouraged other women to display their repertory. The School of Scottish Studies published a boxed cassette of songs and stories by Annie and Calum Johnston in 1980. mm ac l • Recording: Calum and Annie Johnston, CTRAX 9013, [1980 Greentrax Recordings, Edinburgh]. Béaloideas, vols 1, 4 and 6; Campbell, J. L. and Collinson, F. (1969–81) Hebridean Folksongs, 3 vols; Gairm, nos. 2, 6, and 10; Kennedy-Fraser, M. (1909–21) Songs of the Hebrides, 3 vols; Tocher (School of Scottish Studies), no. 13 (1980). JOHNSTON, Elizabeth

(1784–1869)

see FLUCKER, Barbara

born Hamilton c. 1835, died Barony Poorhouse hospital, Springburn, c. 1873. Poet and autobiographer. Daughter of Mary Bilsland, and James Johnston, stonemason. Ellen Johnston, known as ‘The Factory Girl’, was one of the small number of 19th-century working-class women poets. Her father emigrated to America when Ellen was a baby and eight years later her mother, believing him dead, remarried. Ellen’s life of extreme hardship included flight from home after abuse by her stepfather, poor health resulting from work in factories in Glasgow, Belfast, Manchester and Dundee, and single parenthood (she had an illegitimate daughter in 1852), yet she managed to write from an early age. She enjoyed some middle-class patronage, particularly from the Rev. George Gilfillan and Alexander Campbell, editor of the Penny Post, and two editions of her poems were produced on subscription in 1867 and 1869. The second edition acknowledges ‘the gift of Five Pounds from Her Majesty Queen Victoria, and the grant of Fifty Pounds from the Royal Bounty Fund . . . which enabled me to furnish a home and discharge the pecuniary obligations I had unavoidably contracted for my maintenance in Glasgow, while suffering from a

JOHNSTON, Ellen,

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delicate constitution and factory life, to which I have long been a victim’ (Johnston 1869, v). Ellen Johnston’s poetry is often sentimental (especially when she writes in English rather than Scots) and technically conservative, but a voice of true feeling gleams through, and she is often radical. She celebrated Garibaldi’s visit to Britain, comparing him to Wallace who ‘purchased Scotland’s freedom with the ransom of his life’. Her poems provoked poetic addresses from other working men and women to which she replied, establishing a culture of compliment. ‘The Last Sark’, her most anthologised poem, is radical in feeling and forthright in expression; until recently its fame unfairly relegated her other verse. Both editions of her poems include an autobiography which is the only real source of information about her life. The second version omits reference to her child and removes the detail of her persecution by her female fellow workers after her successful case for wrongful dismissal against the Verdant Factory, Dundee. Possibly she thought she would present a more pleasing image with these omissions. Yet what makes Ellen Johnston’s story so moving is that her real sufferings emerge clearly. Her allusions to abuse by her stepfather are shrouded in sentimental cliché but her sheer endurance rescues her story from self-pity. Given the absence of any real moral, educational and financial support, her achievement is remarkable. Wilson reported that Ellen Johnston died in the Barony Poorhouse in 1873 (Wilson 1873, p. 525). Klaus (1998) suggests a date of 1874. DAM c M • Johnston, E. (1867, 1869) Autobiography, Poems and Songs of Ellen Johnston, the Factory Girl. Boos, F. S. (ed.) (2008) Working-class Women Poets in Victorian Britain: an anthology; DLB Gale, vol. 199, pp. 188–93; Klaus, H. G. (1998) ‘Factory Girl’, SSI, 23; ODNB (2004); Wilson, J. G. (1873) The Poets and Poetry of Scotland, vol. 2; Zlotnick, S. (1991) ‘ “A thousand times I’d be a factory girl” ’, Victorian Studies, vol. 35 no. 1. JOHNSTON, Euphemia, n. Alexander, born 1824 Inveresk, died after 1867. Lady’s nurse. Daughter of Jean Brackenridge, and James Alexander. The eldest of six children, Euphemia Alexander married Alexander Johnston in June 1844 in Edinburgh. By 1851, she was widowed and living with her three young daughters and her elderly aunt in Edinburgh. She may have attended the Maternity hospital as a pupil midwife that year; she certainly made the acquaintance of Professor James Simpson and impressed him with her competence. In her regular entries in

the annual Post Office Directory of Edinburgh, she described herself as a ‘lady’s nurse’. Following a recommendation by Simpson, she attended Princess Christian (daughter of *Queen Victoria) at the birth of her first child in 1867. From then on, her career continued among élite women able to afford her fee of 25 guineas. Her career path contrasts with that of other women who gained midwifery or nursing expertise in Edinburgh such as *Margaret Bethune. bem • Mortimer, B. (2002) ‘The nurse in Edinburgh c. 1760– 1860: the impact of commerce and professionalisation’, PhD, Univ. of Edinburgh (lists primary sources). JOHNSTONE, Caroline Elizabeth Mary (Carrie),

born Alva, Clackmannanshire, 25 July 1849, died Alva 4 July 1929. Philanthropist. Daughter of Hon. William Augusta Ann Norton, and James Johnstone, landowner. Born into a prominent local family living at Alva House, Carrie Johnston was a generous local benefactor and active citizen, although her spending resulted in the decline and eventual dilapidation of the family home. She moved to Myretoun House, where she lived with her companion of many years, Miss L’Estrange. Typical of philanthropic middle-class women in the late 19th century, Carrie Johnstone was involved in many national and local charities, including serving as President of the Scottish Domestic Servants’ Benevolent Association and working with the Alva Mothers’ Union and Child Welfare Society. A gifted public speaker, she was President of the Alva Women’s Unionist Association and a member of the Clackmannanshire Central Committee for Maternal and Child Welfare. She also took a close personal interest in local families’ welfare. A fountain in her memory, funded by public subscription, was erected in 1951 in Johnstone Park (the park was a gift to the town from her father). si • Alloa Advertiser, 17 Nov. 1951, p. 4; Alloa Journal, 6 July 1929 (obit.); Dovey, N. (2002) Alva 1900–2000. Additional information: Alloa Library, Morag Cross. JOHNSTONE, Christian Isobel [Meg Dods], n. Todd, m1 M’Leish, m2 Johnstone, born Edinburgh 12 June

1781, died Edinburgh 26 August 1857. Journalist and woman of letters. Daughter of Jean Campbell, and James Todd, medical student. Early in life, according to the Biographical Dictionary of Eminent Men of Fife (1866), Christian Isobel Todd married a man called M’Leish 221

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from whom she later obtained a divorce: the ­circumstances surrounding this remain obscure. In 1815, she married John Johnstone (1779–1857), a schoolmaster at Dunfermline. She may have been the author of The Saxon and the Gael (1814), a novel of social comedy. In 1815 she published anonymously her best-known novel, Clan-Albin: A National Tale. She and her husband became editors of the Inverness Courier in 1817 and, after what seems to have been a successful period in Inverness, the Johnstones moved in 1824 to Edinburgh where Christian wrote the novel, Elizabeth de Bruce (1827). She also joined her husband in editing the Edinburgh Weekly Chronicle, the weekly The Schoolmaster and the monthly Johnstone’s Magazine. In 1834, she formed with William Tait her most important literary connection. She began to assist in the management of the popular Tait’s Edinburgh Magazine, which, in opposition to Blackwood’s Magazine, supported radical politics: in the same year Johnstone’s Magazine merged with Tait’s. Although not, strictly speaking, the editor, she had entire charge of the literary department, and was a regular contributor. Christian Johnstone befriended and supported the radical poet, Robert Nicoll, and many other young writers and she employed an unusually high number of women to write for the magazine. She edited a number of fiction contributions to Tait’s and other periodicals, including some of her own, as The Edinburgh Tales, 1845–6. Among other writings are Nights of the Round Table (1832), and the Cook and Housewife’s Manual, by ‘Mrs Margaret (Meg) Dods’ (1826), which subsequently went into 11 editions. She also published The Diversions of Hollycot; or, The Mother’s Art of Thinking (1828), an instructional work for children which includes an account of the life of the exemplary Scottish heroine, *Lady Grisell Baillie (1665–1746). Throughout her career as journalist and editor she was a thorough professional with a strong sense of the commercial possibilities of the craft. She died aged 76, a few months before her husband. They were buried in Grange Cemetery, Edinburgh, where an obelisk was erected to their memory. DAM c M • Johnstone, C., Works as above, and see Bibls. below. A Highland Newspaper: The First Hundred and Fifty Years of ‘The Inverness Courier’, 1817–1967 ; HSWW (Bibl.); DNB vol. X (1908); McMillan, D. (2002–3) ‘Figuring the Nation: Christian Isobel Johnstone as novelist and editor’, Études Écossaises 9, pp. 27–41; NWSLR; Monnickendam, A. (2003) ‘Introduction’ to Clan-Albin: A national tale, ASLS, v-xxi

(Bibl.); ODNB (2004); The Wellesley Index to Victorian Periodicals, 1824–1900: (includes authors and Bibls.), 5 vols, 1966–89; Perkins, P. (2010) Women Writers and the Edinburgh Enlightenment.

m. Sutherland, born Edinburgh 25 Dec. 1892, died Bodelwyddan, North Wales, 15 July 1980. Artist and art educator. Daughter of Jessie Hunter Heron, and George Whitton Johnstone, RSA, artist. In 1908 Dorothy Johnstone enrolled for the Drawing and Painting course at ECA. A precociously gifted student, she obtained her Diploma in 1912, along with a maintenance bursary and a studio in the College. She joined the teaching staff in 1914. From 1915 summers were spent in Kirkcudbright painting alongside other female artists such as Anne Finlay (1898–1963). She first exhibited at the RSA in 1912 and the next year showed Marguerite, a virtuoso portrait of her younger sister Rona Johnstone (1902–2003, later a successful dance teacher), who inspired much of her early figure work. She exhibited with the dynamic Edinburgh Group (1919, 1920, 1921), as one of its three female members, and at the RA in London, until 1923. In 1924 she had a joint exhibition in Edinburgh with her close friend *Cecile Walton, and married fellow Edinburgh Group exhibitor David MacBeth Sutherland. She had to give up her teaching post on marriage, entering a new phase of her life as ‘artist’s wife and portrait painter’ (Sturrock 1980, p. 32). Her son Iain (b. 1925) and daughter Anne (b. 1928) both feature in her work. In 1933, she relocated to Aberdeen where her husband was Head of Gray’s School of Art, settling in Cults in 1939 and exhibiting regularly with the AAS. Her work largely consisted of portraiture and figure painting, focusing almost exclusively on women and children, but she also produced landscapes. Her long and productive career (SSA 1931, ARSA 1962) lost some of its momentum after her marriage and the premature end of her role as a gifted art educator. nji

JOHNSTONE, Dorothy,

• ECA Archives: student records 1908–20; Board of Management Reports, minute books 1908–13; RSA Archives: Sturrock, M. N. (1980) ‘Dorothy Johnstone, ARSA’, in One Hundred and Fifty-Third Annual Report of the Council of the RSA, pp. 31–2. Aberdeen Art Gallery & Museums (1983) Dorothy Johnstone, ARSA, 1892–1980, A Memorial Exhibition (catalogue); Bourne, P. (2000) Kirkcudbright: 100 years of an artists’ colony; Kemplay, J. (1983) The Edinburgh Group; Stephens, J. W.

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JORDAN (1924) ‘Cecile Walton and Dorothy Johnstone’, The Studio, vol. 88; MSW ; Taylor, E. A. (1920) ‘The Edinburgh Group’, The Studio, vol. 79. JONES, Beti, CBE, born Trehafod, Rhondda Valley, S. Wales, 23 Jan. 1919, died Rhondda Valley 6 Sept. 2006. Social work organiser. Daughter of Elizabeth Rowlands, and Isaac Jones, coalminer. Beti Jones was the first in her family to attend university (BA History, University of Wales, Cardiff ), before teaching for two years. A post as South Wales Organiser for the National Association of Girls’ Clubs (1943–7) led to two years in postwar Germany as youth education officer for the Allied Control Commission, working with refugees. Returning as Glamorgan County Council’s first-ever Children’s Officer (1949–68), she was noted as a humane reforming presence there, before moving to Scotland. As the first Chief Adviser on Social Work for the Scottish Office from 1968, she played a key role in developing the Social Work (Scotland) Act of that year. This called for a much-strengthened service and greater investment in training, for which Beti Jones was largely responsible. One major reform she helped introduce was the unique Scottish system of Children’s Hearings, based on lay-staffed children’s panels, to spare children the ordeal of adult court. She was also instrumental in eliminating long-stay (psychiatric) hospitals and introducing early forms of community care. A Quaker, with a lifelong commitment to children’s welfare, Beti Jones worked with the Child Poverty Action Group and served on the committee of Save the Children UK. She is described by those who knew her as ‘redoubtable’ (Statham 2014, p. 54), a natural innovator, a larger-than-life personality of great warmth and kindness. On retirement in 1980, she received a CBE, then divided her time between Edinburgh and Blairgowrie, returning late in life to be near family in Wales. SR

• Holman, R. (1998) Child Care Revisited: children’s departments, 1948–71; Statham, R. (2014) The Golden Age of Probation; Thane, P. and Davidson, R. (2016) The Child Poverty Action Group 1965–2015; The Herald, 15 Dec. 2006, The Scotsman, 14 Dec. 2006 (obits). JORDAN, Jessie,‡ n. Wallace or Haddow, m1 Jordan, m2 Baumgarten, born Glasgow 23 Dec. 1887, died Hamburg 1954. Spy. Daughter, out of wedlock, of Elizabeth Wallace, domestic servant, and (possibly) William Ferguson.

Jessie Wallace grew up in Perth, with her mother and stepfather, taking the latter’s name (Haddow) in the 1901 census. Working in domestic service, she met a German waiter, Frederick Jordan, in Dundee, and in 1907, when he was 18 and she was 19, they moved to Hanover, marrying in 1912. A daughter, Marga, later an actress, was born in 1914. When Frederick died during the First World War, Jessie Jordan stayed on, working as a hairdresser in Hamburg. She returned to Perth in 1919, but by April 1920 was back in Germany, and married her husband’s cousin, Baur Baumgarten. The marriage did not last, and in 1937 she returned to Scotland, partly to help her daughter establish her ‘Aryan’ descent. She also had a son training in the German army. By this time, she had been recruited by the German secret service, the Abwehr, possibly under pressure (Jeffreys-Jones, p. 771). The hairdressing business she set up in Dundee was used by German agents in the USA and Britain as a forwarding address. She received letters and documents, which she then sent to Hamburg. MI5 had Jessie Jordan under surveillance all along, though to disguise this fact it allowed the legend of a ‘vigilant Dundee postie’ to appear the cause of her arrest on 2 March 1938. The charges included receiving and forwarding censored mail, but also photographing and sketching classified coastal and military locations. She was found guilty of spying. A Dundee newspaper commented at the time: ‘It does not appear that Mrs Jordan took to spying because of love of Germany or hatred of Britain, or even from desire to make money from it. She has apparently been chosen as an instrument by agents aware of her personal history, and in a position to put her under some form of pressure to do what was required of her’ (Dundee Courier 1938). Jessie Jordan spent most of the Second World War under lock and key (from 1941 interned as an ‘enemy alien’). After the war, she was repatriated to Germany, where she died in 1954. Documents relating to her arrest were released by MI5 in April 2000 (NA). Perhaps, as Kim Philby claimed of himself, Jessie Jordan ‘never belonged’ anywhere (Jeffreys-Jones, p. 783). FJ/SR • NA: KV2/193–4; NRS: Trial records 1938. The Daily Telegraph, 20 April 2000; Dundee Courier and Advertiser, 17 May 1938; Jeffreys-Jones, R. (2014) ‘Jessie Jordan: a rejected Scot who spied for Germany and hastened America’s flight from neutrality’, The Historian, pp. 766–83. Mahoney, M. H. (1993) Women in Espionage; Watson, N. (1997) Daughters of Dundee.

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K KAY, Christian Janet, DLitt,

born Edinburgh 4 April 1940, died Glasgow 4 June 2016. Linguist, lexicographer, academic. Daughter of Dorothy Margaret Mack, and William Dewar Kay, both ­schoolteachers. Christian Kay was educated at the Mary Erskine School, followed by study at the University of Edinburgh and Mount Holyoke College, USA. Although she never intended to become an a­ cademic, after various language-related posts, she arrived at Glasgow in 1969 as a research assistant, later moving to a lectureship and then a Chair in English Language (1996). Her field was the linguistics of English, specialising in the history of the language. A lifetime of research ­culminated in the widely acclaimed publication of the Historical Thesaurus of the Oxford English Dictionary (2009): the world’s largest thesaurus, and the most complete in English. This was a team effort, initiated by Michael Samuels. Having taken on leadership of the programme, Christian Kay found herself managing a large team of linguists, lexicographers and programmers. A pioneer in the study of ‘big data’, she harnessed information ­technology to handle the complex materials involved. In this role, she secured funding and employment for over 200 ­researchers and p ­ roduction staff for 40 years. The project’s ­considerable royalties were assigned to postgraduate studentships. Christian Kay’s contribution to Scottish linguistic projects included being the first ever Convener of the Board of Scottish Language Dictionaries, and as such responsible for coordinating the Dictionary of the Scots Language, now the principal repository for the study of Scots words and their history. She was also the founder of the Scottish Corpus of Text and Speech and worked after retirement on the Corpus of Modern Scottish Writing. Regarded as an ‘awesomely effective’ academic leader, she was equally respected for her wit and humanity. Glasgow University awarded her a DLitt in 2013. JJSm

• Kay, C. (2009) (participation in Works as above); (2014) ‘English lexicographers and their achievements’, Historiographica Linguistica 41 (2–3), pp. 355–368. Caie, G. D. et al. (eds) (2006) The Power of Words: essays in

lexicography, lexicology and semantics. In honour of Christian J. Kay; The Herald, 20 June 2016 (obit.). KAY, Christina,‡ born Edinburgh 11 June 1878, died Midhope, West Lothian, 23 May 1951. School teacher. Model for Miss Jean Brodie in *Muriel Spark’s The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie. Daughter of Mary Ann MacDonald, and Alexander Kay, cabinet maker. Christina Kay led an apparently uneventful life, but one that would inspire one of the great characters of 20th-century literature: Miss Jean Brodie (Spark 1961). From the age of five, she was a pupil at James Gillespie’s School for Girls, one of Edinburgh’s merchant company schools, where she would later teach. Between 1897 and 1899, she‡ completed her teacher training at the Church of Scotland college in Edinburgh, where her conduct was described as ‘exemplary’. An only child and a devout Christian, Christina Kay was born and lived in the same flat, at 4 Grindlay Street, Edinburgh, almost all her life. Her father died when she was 15, and she lived with her mother, caring for her until her death in 1913. She never married. Her pupils believed, probably correctly, that like many other women of her generation she lost her fiancé in the First World War. Christina Kay devoted her life to teaching at Gillespie’s. Since in her early years very few women could take degrees, as younger colleagues could, she remained a ‘class mistress’, without promotion. But she was an inspirational teacher to her classes of 11- to 12-year-olds, sharing with them her passion for the arts. In 1929–30 they included the young Muriel Camberg (later Spark) whose literary success she predicted. Muriel Spark’s Curriculum Vitae (1992, pp. 56 ff.), vividly recalling Miss Kay, makes it clear that Jean Brodie was based on ‘that character in search of an author’. Christina Kay would exhilarate her pupils by speaking in ‘dazzling non-sequiturs’ (ibid., p. 59) of her foreign travels, particularly to Italy, and the great art she saw there, reproductions of which adorned her schoolroom walls. She admired Mussolini, as many contemporaries did, and a picture of his Fascisti was also given wall space. Miss Kay called her entire class the ‘crème de la crème’ but she

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also had favourites, including Muriel Camberg and her friend Frances Niven, whom she took to exhibitions, theatre and ballet. Most of her pupils found her teaching unforgettable. Perhaps from shyness, Miss Kay kept her coming retiral in 1942 secret, but a tribute in the school magazine said that ‘service like hers must surely be unique’; the tribute spoke of her love of ancient Greece and therefore of perfection in all things, ‘for the gods see everywhere’. She was buried, as she wished, in Abercorn Cemetery, West Lothian. ed

in Britain. Dinah Kaye had a distinctive husky, smoky voice, a great sense of humour, and on stage had an excellent rapport with her audience. She retired to Edinburgh. PM ac K • The Herald, 4 Oct. 2011, The Independent, 20 Oct. 2011, The Scotsman, 19 Sept. 2011 (obits Dinah Kaye); Evening Times, 10 Oct. 2015; The Scotsman, 13 Oct. 2015 (obits Mary McGowan). Personal knowledge.

KAYE, Dinah (n. Kay Cumming), born

Burma 2 Feb. 1924, died Edinburgh 12 Sept. 2011. Jazz singer. Daughter of Catherine Marshall, dressmaker, and Thomas Cumming, civil engineer. Kay Cumming spent her teenage years in Edinburgh and her first public performances were with local bands, in jazz clubs. Moving to London in 1943, she became resident singer with the Harry Parry Orchestra as Dinah Kaye, then went freelance, spending two years in Holland. Back in London, she became the popular resident singer at Fischer’s and had regular spots at most of the fashionable London clubs, singing with many of the top bands of the day and recording with Decca. Billy Daniels, the popular singer of ‘That Old Black Magic’, heard her work and encouraged her to go to America with him to pursue her career there, which resulted in Decca immediately releasing one of her records in the US. Dinah Kaye travelled extensively in America and Canada, appearing with many of the big names, including Louis Armstrong, who remained a friend throughout her time there. Another Scottish singer who was admired by Louis Armstrong was Mary McGowan, n. Menzies (1930–2015),who sang with the Clyde Valley Stompers. When Louis appeared at Glasgow’s Kelvin Hall he insisted that Mary sing or he would not. Dinah Kaye returned after four years in America to re-launch her career in London: during the 1950s and 1960s, she toured in Europe, including Poland, Germany and Switzerland, and in South Africa, and made regular radio broadcasts. She came second to Cleo Laine in a 1965 Melody Maker poll of the most popular female jazz singer

born Cupar 4 March 1827, died London 6 Jan. 1914. Novelist. Daughter of Mary Gibb, and Philip Keddie, lawyer and coalmaster. Henrietta Keddie, seventh of eight children, was educated at home by an older sister, apart from a few months’ schooling in Edinburgh. When their father’s mining interests resulted in financial disaster for the household, several of the sisters opened a small private school for girls in Cupar, where Henrietta taught from 1848 to 1870. She had already begun writing and her first novel, Phemie Millar, was published under her own name in 1854. Most of her work thereafter appeared under the pseudonym ‘Sarah Tytler’. Her success allowed her to become a full-time writer and she moved to London in 1870 with her sister Margaret, moving in literary circles and becoming acquainted with other women writers, such as Mrs Craik and *Margaret Oliphant. Much of her prolific production (she published well over 100 titles) consisted of historical romances for girls. Two adult novels are notable: St Mungo’s City (1884), a novel of manners set in middle-class Victorian Glasgow, and Logie Town (1887), a loving portrait of her native town of Cupar. Henrietta Keddie collaborated with the Edinburgh writer Jean Logan Watson (1835–85) in editing The Songstresses of Scotland (1871), an anthology of Scottish women songwriters. Jean Watson wrote guidebooks and local history, biographies of Scottish religious leaders and one of Hugh Miller, and novels, including Bygone days in our village (1864) and Heiress of Ravensby: a tale of reformation times (1882). She was known for ‘racy dialect and unconventional manners’ and was ‘of a commanding presence, with traces of a dark beauty probably derived from a strain of gypsy blood of which she boasted, forthgoing in all her impulses, trenchant in utterance’ (Scots Pictorial 1898, pp. 354–5). Following her sister’s death, Henrietta Keddie moved to Oxford in 1884, and continued to

KEDDIE, Henrietta [Sarah Tytler],

• NRS: registration records; Moray House Archives; James Gillespie’s High School records; JGHS School Magazine, 1942. Spark, M. (1961) The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, (1992) Curriculum Vitae. Private information from former pupils, including Dame Muriel Spark and Frances Cowell (n. Niven).

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write, using the Bodleian Library for her historical research and acquiring a new circle of friends among the women students. Her autobiography, Three Generations (1911), contains, as the title suggests, much information about her family, but little about her own busy and successful writing career. marb • Keddie, H., and Tytler, S., Works as above and see HSWW (Select Bibl.). Burgess, M. (1997) ‘Rediscovering Scottish women’s fiction’, in HSWW (Bibl.); ODNB (2004); ‘Scots worthies: Henrietta Keddie (“Sarah Tytler”)’, Scots Pictorial, 1 Jan. 1898.

born Toronto, Canada, 26 Dec. 1883, died London 20 March 1969. Surgeon for the *Scottish Women’s Hospitals during the First World War. Daughter of Eliza Somerville, and Major-General Jonathan Keer, ­ex-HM Bengal Staff Corps. Honoria Keer graduated MBChB from the University of Glasgow in 1910. After civilian posts at Glasgow Royal Asylum, Gartnavel, and as House Surgeon at Kilmarnock, she joined the Girton and Newnham Unit of the SWH abroad from December 1915. After service in France and Salonika, she became MO (head) of the unit for Serbian refugees in Ajaccio, Corsica, in April 1918. She was awarded the French Croix de Guerre and the Médaille des Epidémies, having also received the Serbian Order of St Sava. Honoria Keer then worked as a GP in Lanark, before obtaining a Diploma in Tropical Medicine (London) in 1924. She spent most of the next 10 years as Lady Medical Officer at Massey Street Dispensary in Lagos, Nigeria, before retiring prematurely to Bayswater in London in 1934, illness abroad having resulted in recurrent hearing problems. During the Second World War, she worked actively for the WVS in civil defence, and was responsible, among other things, for the Queen’s letter to householders. She was described by a SWH colleague, Isabel Emslie (1887–1960), as ‘a strange mass of contradictions: serious, reserved, and with very correct old-world manners; . . . at the same time . . . her sly wit was a constant joy’ (Leneman 1994, p. 37). jlmj KEER, Honoria Somerville,

• Univ. of Glasgow Archive: DC171, Honoria Keer papers. Alexander, W. (1987) First Ladies of Medicine ; Leneman, L. (1994) In the Service of Life ; McLaren, E. S. (ed.) (1919) A History of the Scottish Women’s Hospitals; Medical Directory (1919–20); Medical Register (1969); www.scottishwomenshospitals.co.uk.

KEILLER, Gabrielle Muriel, n. Ritchie, m1 unknown, m2 Style, m3 Keiller, born North Berwick 10 August 1908, died Bath 23 Dec. 1995. Golf champion and art collector. Daughter of Daisy Hoare, and James (Jack) Ritchie, rancher. Gabrielle Ritchie’s birth in Scotland was unexpected, her parents being on a golfing holiday. Brought up in Rutland with her two brothers, and privately educated, she took up golf early, and had a flourishing career in the 1930s and 1940s. She won the Ladies’ Open in Switzerland, Luxembourg and Monaco in 1948, and was selected for England several times as ‘one of the longest hitters in the country’ (Calvocoressi 1997, p. 9). During the Second World War, she drove ambulances for the LCC. She had been twice married briefly and had a son, and it was as Mrs Style that in 1947 she met Alexander Keiller (1889–1955), heir to the Dundee marmalade fortune. Having ‘run away to France’ (Murray 1999, p. 109), they married when his divorce came through in 1951 and were a devoted couple until his death from cancer in 1955, Gabrielle being his fourth wife. Alexander Keiller had sold his family shares in 1918, and devoted his wealth largely to his passion for archaeology, including the excavation of Windmill Hill and Avebury. After her husband’s death, Gabrielle Keiller had his reports edited, and worked at the BM as a volunteer in the archaeology department. She gave up golf, converted to Catholicism, and began a second career as a serious art connoisseur, having inherited both from her husband and from her American connections. After visiting Peggy Guggenheim in 1960 in Venice, where she saw Eduardo Paolozzi’s work, she became a patron to Paolozzi and Richard Long among others. Advised notably by Roland Penrose, she was also a remarkable collector of Dada and Surrealism, amassing major works of art and thousands of catalogues, letters, manuscripts, books, journals and ephemera, some of which were exhibited anonymously at the SNGMA in 1988 (‘The Magic Mirror’). Having been an active member of SNGMA’s Advisory Committee, with an ‘acerbity of eye which does not go to sleep’ (ibid., p. 17), she bequeathed her entire surrealist collection to the Gallery. It is now in SNGMA2, Edinburgh. A perfectionist, tall and elegant, Gabrielle Keiller was personally modest – but commissioned Andy Warhol to do a portrait of her dachshund, Maurice. Her ashes are buried alongside her husband’s in the walls of Gairn Castle, on his former estate at Morven, Deeside. sr

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KEITH • Gabrielle Keiller Collection, SNGMA, online catalogues. Calvocoressi, R. (1997) ‘Gabrielle Keiller, a biographical sketch’, in E. Cowling, et al., Surrealism and After : The Gabrielle Keiller Collection; Cowling, E. (1988) The Magic Mirror, catalogue; Gere, C. and Vaizey, M. (1999) Great Women Collectors; Murray, L. J. (1999) A Zest for Life.

n. Mathewson, born Dundee c. 1737, died Dundee 23 July 1813. Shopkeeper, associate in marmalade family. The most persistent account of the origin of the Keiller marmalade business is that a cargo of Seville oranges, storm-bound in Dundee, inspired Mrs Keiller to try out her recipe for quince marmalade on a new fruit. Some such chance is not impossible, but the Keillers were mainly confectioners throughout Janet Keiller’s life. In 1762, she had married John Keiller (1737–1804). They had eight children and Janet Keiller kept a shop in Seagate, ‘like many other female establishments of the time’ (Mathew 1998, p. 2), based on domestic production of cakes, biscuits, jams, jellies and sweets. Recipes for orange marmalade already existed, but the Keillers appear to have promoted a chopped-peel Scottish variety, ‘chip marmalade’, lighter than most, and set up a company in about 1797, in the name of their son James (1775–1839). Keiller’s was ‘in considerable measure run by women in its first decades’ (ibid., p. 11), but marmalade was only a small part of their confectionery business until well into the 19th century. The success of the breakfast delicacy was probably mostly due to good marketing and branding, contributing to Dundee’s reputation as the home of ‘jam, jute and journalism’. sr

KEILLER, Janet,

• DWT; Mathew, W. M. (1998) Keiller’s of Dundee: the rise of the marmalade dynasty (Abertay Hist. Soc., no. 38, Bibl.); ODNB (2004) (Keiller, John M.). KEIR, Elizabeth n. Rae, born probably early 1750s, died Edinburgh 3 Nov. 1834. Writer, philanthropist. Daughter of Isobel Cant, and James Rae, surgeon. Elizabeth Rae married the Perthshire-born William Keir MD (1753–83) in London on 27 Sept. 1779; he became physician to St Thomas’s hospital in London in 1780, and they had three children. On her husband’s death, Elizabeth Keir returned to her Edinburgh family home. Unusually in Scotland in the 1780s, to help support her children she wrote, anonymously, two epistolary novels, Interesting Memoirs (1785) and The History of Miss Greville (1786). The author has been misidentified as Susannah Harvey Keir. Both novels were collaboratively published between London and Edinburgh,

though the Critical Review hints that Interesting Memoirs first appeared in Scotland; the History of Miss Greville may have been printed wholly in Edinburgh. Elizabeth Keir enjoyed some financial success, and critics praised the novels, with the Critical Review (1787, p. 201) finding ‘frequent proofs of judicious reflection . . . a well-informed mind, and . . . a well-regulated heart’. Though conventionally didactic and not specifically Scottish, they suggest a familiarity with philosophical ideas and a readiness to engage with them. In 1805 Elizabeth Keir founded the Edinburgh Institution for the Relief of Incurables at their Own Homes, leaving a fund which survives today. She was aunt to *Marjory Fleming. She is buried in Greyfriars Kirkyard, Edinburgh. JR • NRS: GD1/1094, Royal Society for Home Relief of Incurables. [Keir, E], Works as above. Angiolini, L. (1790), Lettere sopra l’Inghilterra, Scozia e Olanda, 2 vols; Critical Review (1786) 61, Jan., p. 78, (1787) 64, Sept., pp. 200–1. Garside, P. (2012) ‘The novel’ in S. W. Brown and W. Macdougall (eds) The Edinburgh History of the Book in Scotland. Vol. 2 Enlightenment and Expansion 1707–1800; Martin, J. (ed.) (1998) A Governess in the Age of Jane Austen; Raven, J. and Forster, A. (2000) The English Novel 1770–1829: a bibliographical survey of prose fiction published in the British Isles, Vol. 1, 1770–1799; (1812) ‘View of the institution of Edinburgh, for the relief of incurables’, Scots Magazine, 74, pp. 279–82. KEITH, Annas (Agnes, Anna),‡ Countess of Moray, Countess of Argyll, died 16 July 1588. Daughter of

Margaret Keith of Inverugie, and William Keith, 4th Earl Marischal. Probably born at Dunnottar Castle, Annas Keith was well educated, later becoming known for her Protestantism. In an unusual love match, she married Lord James Stewart, Earl of Moray ­(1531/2–70), close adviser to his half-sister *Mary, Queen of Scots. John Knox preached at the ceremony on 8 February 1562 in St Giles’, Edinburgh, and the Queen provided a lavish banquet at Holyrood Palace. Two daughters survived into adulthood. During 1565, when Moray rebelled, the pregnant Annas, unable to join him in exile, remained in their home in St Andrews Priory defending his interests. Having been prominent at court, in 1567 she became the foremost woman in the country when Moray became Regent. After he was assassinated in January 1570, his widow demonstrated remarkable resilience, efficiently running the

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Moray estates and tenaciously defending her daughters’ inheritance. In spite of long-running, acrimonious disputes with Queen Mary and Regent Morton, she retained certain royal jewels acquired by Moray as part payment of his expenses as Regent. In late January 1572, she married Colin Campbell (c. 1542–84), who became Earl of Argyll in 1573. Annas was the dominant partner, Argyll being ‘overmuch led by his wife’, according to one commentator (Rogers 1873, p. 35). The couple had two sons and a daughter; Annas helped nine-yearold Archibald when he succeeded in 1584. She was buried in Moray’s tomb in St Giles’, Edinburgh. Through her forceful personality and her position as Countess of Moray and Argyll, Annas Keith made a significant impact upon national and regional affairs. Her correspondence also demonstrates that she was able to overcome Moray’s murder and the all-too-common experience of the death of a child. jead

1934. She had married Colin Kenmure, CA in 1933; some of her congregation (a minority) were implacably opposed to having a married woman as minister, and objections came to a head when she became a mother. In dramatic circumstances, she tendered her resignation, declaring ‘a married woman makes an ideal minister. If she is a mother, so much the better, because her gift of understanding is thereby increased’ (Sunday Chronicle 1934). Many agreed; they started a new church, led by Vera Kenmure, and in 1936 joined her when she was called to Hillhead Congregational Church. She also served at Pollokshields (1954–68) and regularly preached in pulpits of several denominations. She became a spokeswoman and figurehead in Glasgow for women’s equality, regarded her ministry as encompassing wider civic responsibilities, and pioneered marriage counselling. She chaired the management committee of the Scottish Congregational College and, as President of the CUS 1952–3, attended the Church of Scotland General Assembly, although initially refused entrance because of her sex. lo

• NRAS 217: Moray Muniments, Darnaway Castle. Historical Manuscripts Commission Sixth Report ; eODNB; Rogers, C. (ed.) (1873) Estimate of Scottish Nobility; SP, 6, pp. 48–50; Thomson, T. (ed.) (1853) Registrum Honoris de Morton.

• Family papers. Escott, A. (1990) ‘True valour’, in K. McCarra and H. Whyte (eds) A Glasgow Collection; *eODNB; Sunday Chronicle, 25 March 1934. Private information.

KENMURE, Jane, Lady see CAMPBELL, Jane (b. before 1607–d. 1675) KENMURE, Vera Mary Muir, n. Findlay, born Glasgow 13 Feb. 1904, died Aberdeen 27 Dec. 1973. Minister and first woman ordained to a pastoral charge in a Scottish mainstream denomination. Daughter of Viola Craig, and John Findlay, measurer. Vera Findlay became Dux in English at Hillhead High School, Glasgow and a prizewinner in classics at the University of Glasgow. As a student she began seriously to consider ministry in the Congregational Church, encouraged by the Principal of the Scottish Congregational College, where she studied with distinction 1926–8. A gifted preacher, she so impressed the deacons of Partick Congregational Church that they called her to be their pastor before she had completed her BD degree at the University of Glasgow. Ordained on 1 November 1928, in 1929 she applied for recognition as a minister of the Congregational Union of Scotland (CUS), stimulating great debate about women’s ordination within Scottish Protestant churches. On 29 April 1929, the CUS carried a constitutional amendment allowing ‘minister’ to apply equally to women and men. She remained at Partick until

c. 1480–1547. Mistress of James IV. Daughter of Elizabeth Gordon, and John, Lord Kennedy. Janet Kennedy married first c. 1493, aged about 12, Alexander Gordon of Lochinvar, with whom she had a daughter, also called Janet. By 1497, she was the mistress of Archibald Douglas (c. 1449–1513), 5th Earl of Angus. She later claimed to be married to him but she was in fact in 1497 still married to Alexander Gordon. In 1498, she received from the Earl various lands including the barony of Bothwell and its castle, but within a year had become the mistress of James IV (1473–1513). This was probably the reason for the quarrel between James and the Earl and the latter’s political eclipse for the next eight years. James was the father of Janet Kennedy’s son, the Earl of Moray, and at least two daughters. He gave her Darnaway Castle but only as long as she remained ‘without another man’ (RMS, ii, no. 2585). In 1505, she was described as the spouse of Sir John Ramsay of Trarinzean, an intimate courtier of James’s but also an English spy and traitor. By 1513, all these men were dead and Janet Kennedy spent the next 30 years looking after

KENNEDY, Janet, Lady Bothwell,

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the rights of herself and her children. She retained the barony of Bothwell and also acquired a house in the fashionable Cowgate in Edinburgh. She was litigious and always prepared to play the system to her own advantage. Her life demonstrates that the concept of marriage in late medieval Scotland was a fluid one – and that although the country was Catholic, divorce, which could be obtained on the grounds of consanguinity, was, in practice, easy and common. icmb • RMS, ii. Barnes, I. (2007) Janet Kennedy (Bibl.); Calderwood, A. (ed.) (1993) Acts of the Lords of Council; ER ; RSS; SP; TA; WoM.

n. Kennedy, m. Fraser, born Perth 1 Oct. 1857, died Edinburgh 22 Nov. 1930. Folksong collector, arranger and singer. Daughter of Elizabeth Fraser, and David Kennedy, singer. Initially educated by her father, by 1870 Marjory Kennedy was providing piano accompaniment for his recital tours of Scots song. In 1871, the family, with 11 children, formed a successful vocal group, in which she sang contralto. Their world tour, 1872–9, took in the Antipodes, North America and South Africa. Marjory Kennedy studied voice production with Gambardella in Milan and Marchesi in Paris. In 1887, she married Alec Yule Fraser, who died in 1890, leaving her with two children, David and Patuffa Kennedy-Fraser (1889–1967), the latter named by a visiting friend. Teaching song and piano in Edinburgh, she also assisted her brother-in-law, Tobias Matthay, with The Act of Touch and studied at the Reid School of Music. Her interest in Gaelic song began in 1882, but it was in 1905, at the suggestion of the artist John Duncan, that she found her true calling: collecting folk-song on Eriskay in the Outer Hebrides. Many regard Marjory Kennedy-Fraser’s involvement with Hebridean song as unfortunate (see ODNB, 2004). True, she altered her material, conflated different versions and adapted words from other songs (not always appropriately), and her arrangements have, for some, too much Celtic mist about them. But she was one of the first to make field recordings and was absolutely honest about what she was doing (stating in print that there was no substitute for the tradition as sung traditionally). Her arrangements were sensitive to the modal character of the material, varied in texture, and inspired leading composers such as Granville Bantock and F. G. Scott. Her work KENNEDY-FRASER, Marjory,

was more ­temperately judged by Campbell and Collinson, the two leading experts in the field, and by *Frances Tolmie, one of her chief informants. Her Songs of the Hebrides, published in three volumes (1909–21), have become minor classics. Advanced in style for art-songs of the period, they contain important introductory material, including significant contributions from her Gaelic-speaking collaborator, Kenneth MacLeod, with whom she worked from 1908, and whose contribution is also open to criticism and praise. The famous song ‘The Road to the Isles’ was written by him in 1915, at her request for a tramping song for British troops in the First World War, setting a tune their informant, Calum Johnston (see Johnston, Annie), picked up in Barra. Much of the success of the Songs of the Hebrides was due to Marjory Kennedy-Fraser’s performances, at home and abroad, with her daughter Patuffa on the clarsach. Patuffa, who later married J. C. F. Hood, also assisted on field trips and studied at the Matthay School in London. Marjory Kennedy-Fraser continued as chief music critic for the Edinburgh Evening News. In 1917, she wrote a libretto for Bantock’s opera The Seal-Woman, produced in Birmingham under Sir Adrian Boult in 1924, in which she took the role of Mary MacLeod. The opera incorporated many of the tunes she had published, and was subsequently broadcast. jp • Kennedy-Fraser, M. (1909, 1917, 1921, repr. 1922) Songs of the Hebrides, vols I, II, III, (1913) Sea-Tangle, Some More Songs of the Hebrides, (1922) Hebridean Song and the Laws of Interpretation, (1922) Scots Folk Song, (1923) The KennedyFraser Collection of Part-Songs, (n.d., c. 1925) From the Hebrides, (1929) A Life of Song. Campbell, J. L. (1958) ‘Songs of the Hebrides’, The Scots Magazine, Jan., pp. 307–14; Campbell, J. L. and Collinson, F. (1981) Hebridean Folksongs, vol. III, pp. 324–36; Lindsay, M. (1957) ‘Songs of the Hebrides’; Marjory Kennedy-Fraser – tributes . . . together with the memorial services in London & Edinburgh, 1930, 1931; The Scottish Field, Nov. 1957, pp. 42–4; ODNB (2004). KEPPEL, Alice Frederica, n. Edmonstone, born Woolwich Dockyard 29 April 1868, died Florence, Italy 11 Sept. 1947. Mistress of Edward VII. Daughter of Mary Elizabeth Parsons, and Sir William Edmonstone, 4th Bt and naval commodore.

Alice Edmonstone grew up in the family homes of Duntreath Castle and 11 Ainslie Place, Edinburgh. The youngest of nine children, she married George Keppel (1865–1947), son of the Earl of Albemarle, in 1891, and moved to London. They had two daughters,

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Violet (Trefusis, 1894–1947) and Sonia (Cubitt, 1900– 86, grandmother of Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall). It was probably in 1898, when she was a leading light of London society, that she met the Prince of Wales. She quickly became his mistress, and continued as such when he became King in 1901 and until his death in 1910. Mrs Keppel’s position as royal mistress was widely acknowledged. Queen Alexandra tolerated her, and George Keppel appears to have accepted the situation uncomplainingly. Alice Keppel and Edward VII often attended functions together, and spent an annual holiday in Biarritz where they could almost behave as husband and wife. Alice Keppel’s position brought her considerable wealth and a certain amount of political influence. After the King’s death, at which she was devastated, she was no longer welcome among the royals. She travelled abroad, then returned to London as a society hostess once more. In 1925, the Keppels bought a villa in Tuscany where they lived thereafter, except during the wartime years. Having returned to Italy, they both died there in 1947 and are buried in Florence. FJ/SR • Lamont-Brown, R. (2001) Edward VII’s Last Loves: Alice Keppel and Agnes Keyser; ODNB (2004); Souhami, D. (1996) Mrs Keppel and her Daughter. KER, Alice Jane Shannan Stewart, n. Ker, born Deskford, Banffshire, 2 Dec. 1853, died London 20 March 1943. Doctor, health educator and suffrage campaigner. Daughter of Margaret Millar Stevenson, and William Turnbull Ker, Free Church minister. Alice Ker was the eldest of nine children. Her mother came from a well-to-do middle-class family – two of Margaret Stevenson’s five sisters, the ‘Stevenson aunts’ *Louisa and *Flora, were influential philanthropists and women’s rights campaigners in Edinburgh. At 18, Alice Ker attended University Classes for Ladies in Edinburgh, where she met the women who, under the leadership of *Sophia Jex-Blake, fought for medical education for women. The University of Edinburgh did not issue degrees to women students, so in 1873 she enrolled for classes begun in London by Sophia Jex-Blake. In 1876, she became a Licentiate of the King and Queen’s College of Physicians, Ireland, and the thirteenth woman on the British Medical Register. After a year in Berne, Switzerland, her first post was as House Surgeon to the Children’s Hospital in Birmingham. In 1884, she became a GP in Leeds, then moved to Edinburgh where the Edinburgh Royal College of Surgeons admitted women to the Conjoint Examinations in 1886, and her name is

among the 119 entrants (only one other was female) who passed the finals that year, achieving her aim of qualifying in Britain. In 1888, Alice Ker married her cousin, Edward Stewart Ker (1839–1907), and moved to Birkenhead, where he was a shipping merchant. In 1890, they had a son, who died in infancy, and two daughters, Margaret and Mary, were born in 1892 and 1896. Soon she had a thriving medical practice, the only woman doctor in the area. She became MO to female staff of the Post Office, to the Birkenhead Lying-In Hospital, the Birkenhead Rescue Home and the Caledonian Free Schools, Liverpool. She was involved with social reform through the Ladies’ Sanitary Association and the Ladies’ Temperance Association and in 1891 joined the NUWSS. She gave lectures to working-class women in Manchester on sexuality, motherhood and birth control, which were published as Motherhood: A Book for Every Woman (1891). She tried to be as frank as Victorian mores allowed and with her interest in female hygiene and healthy lifestyles for women on a low budget she was an early exponent of preventive medicine. She was also a vegetarian and anti-vivisectionist. Her husband’s sudden death in 1907 left her with sole financial responsibility for the family. Through Fabian and Socialist friends in Liverpool, Alice Ker and her 17-year-old daughter Margaret became active in the WSPU. In 1912, she took part in a window-smashing raid in London, for which she received a two-month sentence in Holloway Prison. There she wrote a series of letters to her daughters about her motives for taking part in the raid and her life in prison. Margaret Ker, a university student, was herself sentenced to three months in Walton Goal, Liverpool, for militant action. In November 1916, Alice Ker moved to London where she continued in practice, taking school and baby clinics well into her 70s. To her many commitments she added theosophy and, after the First World War, the women’s peace movement. m v h • Museum of London: Suffragette Fellowship collection; The Women’s Library, London: GB 9/29, ‘Autograph Letters Collection, Letters of Rosa May Billington and Dr Alice Ker’, 1912–70; Dr Alice Ker’s diaries 1872–1942 (family papers). Ker, A. Works as above, and (1884) Lectures to Women. Stevenson, L. (1914) ‘Recollections of the public work and home life of Louisa and Flora Stevenson’, printed for private circulation; AGC; Breitenbach, E. et al. (2013) Scottish Women: a documentary history, 1780–1914, pp. 52–4; Cowman, K. (2007) ‘Mrs Brown is a Man and a Brother’. Women in

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KERR Merseyside’s Political Organisations 1890–1920; Helmond, M. van (1992) Votes for Women: the events on Merseyside ­1870–1928; Jex-Blake, S. (1886) Medical Women; Lytton, C. (1914) Prisons and Prisoners; ODNB (2004); Waller, P. J. (1981) Democracy and Sectarianism: a political and social history of Liverpool 1868–1939; WoM; WSM. KER, Anne, Countess of Lothian, c. 1615–1667, probable author of ‘One year begins, another ends’, also known as ‘Lady Lothian’s Lilt’. Elder daughter of Annabell Campbell, and Robert Ker, 2nd Earl of Lothian. Anne Ker’s father committed suicide in March 1624, deeply in debt. His estates were redeemed by his cousin, the courtier (and poet) Sir Robert Ker of Ancrum, a friend of William Drummond, John Donne and *Elizabeth Melville. Sir Robert’s eldest son, Sir William, married Anne Ker in 1630. He became third Earl of Lothian in her right in 1631. Anne Ker and her husband were strong Presbyterians and supported the Covenant, but Anne’s eminently neo-Stoic lyric text is slightly unusual for the period in that its meditation on the transience of human life makes no reference to Christ or even God. The final stanza states that the female author has written the song in answer to a challenge, and that ‘the weakness of a woman’s wit/ is not through natures fault,/But lack of education fit/makes nature quhyls to halt’. The song evidently circulated beyond the Ker family circle, for it saw broadside publication c. 1650 as ‘A Godly Ballad’ (despite the Deity’s absence from its text). JRB

• Edwards, W. (2007) ‘The musical sources’, in J. Porter (ed.) Defining Strains: the musical life of Scots in the seventeenth century, pp. 59–60; H. M. Shire (1969) Song, Dance and Poetry of the Court of Scotland Under King James VI, pp. 256–7; Reid-Baxter, J. (2015) ‘Elizabeth Melville, Lady Culross: two letters to her son James’, in J. Nugent and E. Ewan (eds) Children and Youth in Medieval and Early Modern Scotland. KER, Dame Elizabeth (‘Old Lady Buccleuch’), born c. 1478, died Catslak Tower, 19 Oct. 1548. Victim of a bloodfeud. Daughter of Isabel Hay of Yester, and Walter Ker of Cessford. Dame Elizabeth Ker married first Sir Walter Scott of Buccleuch (d. 1504) and second Philip Rutherford of that Ilk (d. c. 1498). She had been a widow for 44 years and was 70 years old when in 1548 her tower at Catslak in Ettrick Forest was attacked by an English army, assisted by the Kers of Cessford, and she was burned to death. The Kers intentionally targeted Scott lands as part of an

ongoing bloodfeud. The Scotts had also reverted to supporting the Scottish crown, unlike the Kers who remained pledged to England. Elizabeth Ker’s own kinship to the Kers of Cessford and her advanced age were shamefully ignored. The Kers were indicted, but never punished, and the bloodfeud persisted until 1598. mmm • NRS: GD224/529/1/108, Buccleuch Muniments. Meikle, M. M. (1997) ‘Victims, viragos and vamps . . .’, in J. C. Appleby and P. Dalton (eds) Government, Religion and Society in Northern England 1000–1700, p. 174; SP, ii, 228, vii, pp. 331–2, 367 (Bibl.) KERR, Deborah Jane, n. Kerr-Trimmer, m1 Bartley, m2 Viertel, CBE, born Glasgow 30 Sept. 1921, died

Botesdale, Suffolk 16 Oct. 2007. Actor. Daughter of Kathleen Rose Smale, and Capt. Arthur (‘Jack’) Kerr-Trimmer, naval architect and civil engineer. Deborah Kerr’s early life was spent in Helensburgh. After secondary then drama school in Bristol, she won a scholarship with Ninette de Valois’s Sadlers Wells Company aged 17. Feeling too tall (5’6”) for ballet, she played walk-on parts at Regent’s Park Open-Air Theatre in 1939. These led to casting in Major Barbara (1940), where her cinematic expressiveness was first noticed. Her threefold role in The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp (1943) was acclaimed, and her playing of a repressed nun in Black Narcissus (1947) won the New York Film Critics’ Actress of the Year Award. By now, MGM had contracted her, ensuring a Hollywood career working with top actors and directors. Initially branded a demure ‘English rose’, Deborah Kerr’s performances as an alcoholic in Edward, My Son (1949), adventurer in King Solomon’s Mines (1950) and adulterous officer’s wife, rolling on top of NCO Burt Lancaster in Hawaian surf – an iconic film image in From Here to Eternity (1953) – changed perceptions. Kerr was a 1953 Broadway hit in Tea and Sympathy, and in following years was praised in wide-ranging roles, from The King and I (1956) to The Sundowners (1960). In the late 1960s, what she saw as i­ncreasingly exploitative violence and nudity reduced her ­commitment to cinema, though she continued in stage, ­television and film, retiring in 1986. Nominated six times for Best Actress Oscar, a Fellow of the BFI (1986), and presented with a BAFTA Special Award (1991), she received a Lifetime Achievement Oscar in 1994. The citation called her ‘an artist of impeccable grace and beauty [always standing] for perfection, discipline and elegance’. She married twice: 1945–59, Sq. Leader

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Anthony Bartley, two daughters; from 1960, writer Peter Viertel. IB • The Guardian, 19 Oct. 2007, The Independent, 18 Oct. 2007 (obits); IMDb; eODNB.

n. Gunn, born Enzie, Banff, 30 May 1875, died India 12 Jan. 1932. Medical missionary. Daughter of Mary Garden, and John Bain Gunn, farmer. After graduating MBChB (Aberdeen), Isabel Kerr went out to Hyderabad with her Wesleyan missionary husband, Rev. G. M. Kerr, a former joiner, in 1907. Having learned to speak Telugu, she set up wayside dispensaries and travelled from village to village by bullock cart. On discovering the extent of suffering from leprosy in Nizamabad, she opened her first home for lepers at Dichpali in 1915, at first offering only palliative care. Funded by a wealthy Hindu, the home served every religion and caste. In 1921, Isabel Kerr was enabled to do pioneering curative treatment of leprosy by intramuscular injections of hyndocarpus oil, following the discoveries of Leonard Rogers and Edwin Muir. In addition to her teaching work at Dichpali and her later clinic in Hyderabad, Isabel Kerr travelled hundreds of miles, reaching Muslim women lepers secluded in Zenanas (women’s quarters). It is estimated that of her 2,800 patients, more than a thousand had their disease arrested. She was awarded the KaiserI-Hind gold medal (1923). so

KERR, Isabella (Isabel),

• Aberdeen Press and Journal, 24 Dec. 1932; Oldfield, S. (2001) Women Humanitarians; Monahan, D. (1938) The Lepers of Dichpali; Rogers, L. and Muir, E. (1925) Leprosy; Schupbach, W. (2012) ‘Portrait of a lady in Nizamabad: Isabel Kerr’, blog. wellcomelibrary.org; The Times, 24 Dec. 1932; WoM. KERRIGAN, Rose, n. Klasko, born Dublin 11 Feb. 1903, died London 10 July 1995. Communist ­activist. Rose Klasko was born into a Jewish family, the second of five children. Her father, a tailor, came from Siberia and her mother from Lithuania. The family moved to Glasgow where she attended Stow School during the day and Hebrew School in the evenings. She also attended the Socialist Sunday School, listened to debates at Glasgow Green and quickly became involved in political work. At the outbreak of the First World War she was hounded at school for being anti-war. She was active in the rent strikes led by *Mary Barbour. Rose Klasko worked from age 14 and experienced anti-Semitism before finding employment in a department store

at Trongate, from which she was sacked because of her anti-war views. Later, she learned tailoring from her father. She was present on 31 January 1919 at the demonstration in George Square in support of the 40-hour strike that became a battle with the police, with many injured. Greatly influenced by the Russian Revolution, Rose Klasko was a foundation member of the CPGB in January 1921. In 1926, she married Peter Kerrigan (1899–1977), NUWM organiser and industrial organiser of the CPGB. They had three daughters. Both were involved in the National Minority Movement and she was a member of the TGWU and of the SAU. As a young married woman, she supported *Marie Stopes’s work in family planning, strongly aware of the restricted role women had, even in socialist politics. Rose Kerrigan, her husband and their three-year-old daughter, also Rose, visited the Soviet Union in 1935, where she worked in an office while Peter Kerrigan was working for the Communist International. They moved to London in 1939. There she worked for Prudential Insurance, organising a women’s branch of the union. In 1987, Rose Kerrigan visited Cuba. In 1993, she appeared in Time Gentlemen Please, a BBC Scotland documentary about women in the early 20th century, and in 1996 a short film A Red Rose was made about her. nr • NLS: Rose Kerrigan collection; IWM, oral history online, Catalogue no. 9903; interview with Audrey Canning, 21 Aug. 1987; interview with author 9 July 1995; questionnaire returned to author 1995, SOHC. A Red Rose, National Film and Television School, 1996; Gallacher, W. (1978) Revolt on the Clyde ; Glasgow Herald, 20 July 1995 (obit.); Granma [Cuban political weekly] 18 April 1987; Rafeek, N. C. (2008) Communist Women in Scotland: Red Clydeside from the Russian Revolution to the end of the Soviet Union; Scottish Marxist, No 2, Winter, 1972; The Guardian, 19 July 1995 (obit.). KESSON, Jessie, n. MacDonald, born

Inverness 29 Oct. 1916, died London 26 Dec. 1994. Novelist and radio playwright. Daughter (out of wedlock) of Elizabeth MacDonald, domestic servant turned occasional prostitute. Born in a workhouse, Jessie MacDonald’s early life was spent in Elgin’s model lodging house and an Elgin slum made famous in her first and bestknown novel, The White Bird Passes (1958). Her childhood was spent in poverty and in fear of the ‘Cruelty Man’ and she was eventually removed from her mother, who was charged with neglect,

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and sent to an orphanage at Kirkton of Skene where she remained until she left school at 16. Her mother, whom she dearly loved and who taught her poetry, contracted syphilis and was institutionalised until her death in 1949. Jessie MacDonald was an excellent scholar, but was not allowed the university education she yearned for. She failed at farm and shop work and endured miserable years in a hostel in Aberdeen, before a breakdown led to a traumatic year in a mental hospital. Sent to convalesce near Loch Ness, she met and in 1937 married Johnnie Kesson (1905–94) and the two spent some years as farm workers in the North East of Scotland, in wretched tied cottar houses in conditions she described in her fiction. She began writing, often about her early life, for Scottish magazines in 1941. When in 1945 she sent poems and stories to the BBC in Aberdeen, she was invited to an audition by the producer Elizabeth Adair (1910–2005), a former actress who had become the first woman radio announcer in Scotland in 1940. The close partnership that developed between the two women enabled Jessie Kesson to become a prolific writer of scripts and plays for radio. Her work was well respected by the time the Kessons and their two children moved to London in 1951. Her husband was never strong, and Jessie Kesson took on a range of difficult jobs – night carer, cleaner, running old people’s homes – as well as others she preferred, such as psychodrama with disturbed teenagers, deputy head of a further-education institution, artist’s model, and part-time producer on Woman’s Hour. Her play The Childhood (1949) resulted in a Scottish Home Department investigation into the policy of boarding out the children of problem parents as far away as possible from their influence. Her novel Glitter of Mica (1963) is an unhappy tale of farm workers, detailing oppressive conditions and sexual frustration. Another Time, Another Place (1983) shows that a young woman charged to look after Italian prisoners of war on a farm in the Black Isle is more a prisoner than they are. She often used radio to hone subjects for her fiction. The play Somewhere Beyond (1961) is a fictional rendering of her unhappiest teenage years; it seemed to exorcise them, freeing her to choose less personal subjects, such as the novella Where the Apple Ripens (1985). The White Bird Passes was successfully dramatised for television in 1981, while Another Time, Another Place (1983) was made into a prize-winning film. More important for the education-hungry writer, she was

awarded honorary degrees by the universities of Dundee (1984) and Aberdeen (1987). Nursing her increasingly frail husband, she died only six weeks after him in 1994. She had famously invented her own epitaph: ‘Here, very much against her will, lies JK’. But a stone did not seem appropriate; their ashes were scattered at Abriachan, where they met, and a rowan tree was planted as a memorial. IM • NLS: Acc. 7845, Jessie Kesson papers; Univ. of Reading Library: Chatto & Windus archive; BBC archive, Caversham. Kesson, J., Works as above and see HSWW (Bibl.). Anderson, J. (2001) ‘That great brute of a bunion! The construction of masculinity in Jessie Kesson’s Glitter of Mica’, Scot. Studies Rev., 21, Spring; HSWW (Bibl.); Murray, I. (2000) Jessie Kesson: writing her life; Norquay, G. (2000) ‘Borderlines: Jessie Kesson’s The White Bird Passes’, in C. Anderson and A. Christianson (eds) Scottish Women’s Fiction, 1920s to 1960s; *ODNB (2004); The Scotsman, 8 Sept. 2005 (obit. Adair); WoM.

m. Jencks, born London 10 Oct. 1941, died London 8 July 1995. Garden designer, writer, inspiration for the Maggie’s Centres. Daughter of Clare Elwes, and Sir John Keswick, businessman. As the only child of Sir John Keswick, Taipan (MD) of the Jardine Matheson business empire, Maggie Keswick’s education took her from Shanghai and Hong Kong to Britain, where she read English at the University of Oxford. After a brief foray into the fashion business, she went on to study at the Architectural Association in London, where she met Charles Jencks, post-modern architect and writer, whom she married in 1978. In that year, she published The Chinese Garden: history, art and architecture, still widely regarded as the standard work on Chinese gardens. As well as contributing to The Oxford Companion to Gardens (1986), she also edited a history of Jardine Matheson (1982). Her upbringing in China and her fascination with meaning and function in landscape were reflected in the garden that she and Charles Jencks went on to develop at her family home of Portrack, near Dumfries, after 1988. Having survived breast cancer in 1988, she was diagnosed with inoperable cancer in 1993. Her determination to fight the disease led her to try a number of alternative therapies before her death in the summer of 1995. Having seen for herself the problems of providing appropriate care for cancer patients within the NHS, she decided to do what

KESWICK, Margaret (Maggie),‡

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she could to provide a more caring and patientoriented environment for their treatment. During a brief period of remission in 1994, she worked on plans for a new Cancer Caring Centre at the Western General Hospital in Edinburgh (opened in 1996) and went on to publish A View from the Front Line (1994). Together with her Blueprint and Constitution for a Cancer Caring Centre (1995), this has served as the inspiration for the growing number of Maggie’s Centres being developed in Scotland, all of them notable for their architecture and landscape setting. chd

to promote women’s equality in Dundee. She always insisted that she was an atypical representative of women in Dundee. grs

• Keswick, M., Works as above and (2003) The Chinese Garden: history, art and architecture, with an introduction by Alison Hardie. Jencks, C. (2003) The Garden of Cosmic Speculation: www. maggiescentres.org/about-maggies.

KIDD, Margaret Henderson,

n. Mitchell, born Dundee 29 August 1922, died Dundee 18 July 1992. Weaver and welder. Daughter of Isabella Campbell, confectionery worker and part-time cleaner, and Thomas Mitchell, foreman baker and trade unionist. Bella Mitchell left school aged 14; after training and working as a canvas weaver, she entered a munitions factory in 1941. She then trained as a welder and worked in the Caledon shipyard in Dundee until she was made redundant at the end of the war. In 1949, she migrated to Holland with her husband, Dirk Keyzer, adjutant, Royal Dutch Navy, and their son, before returning with her family in 1957 and joining the largely female workforce in Dundee’s expanding light engineering sector. In the mid-1970s, dissatisfied with assembly line work, she took a welding course at Dundee Technical College and subsequently found employment with a small firm. Her aim of returning to shipyard welding was less easily fulfilled and she began to resort to applying to the yards as ‘Mr I. Keyzer’. Finally, she found work with the same company who had employed her during the war – a victory she considered important not only personally, but also for women’s rights generally. She later said, ‘they were all expecting this young dolly bird to come doon, and doon comes this fat ­grey-haired wifie’ (DOHP). Bella Keyzer was an articulate socialist feminist who appeared in a number of television programmes recorded in the late 1980s. She said that her reflections on the gendered construction of skill and occupation were a result of her working experiences. In 1992, Dundee District Council presented her with a special award in recognition of her work

KEYZER, Isabella,

• Dundee Central Library, Wellgate Centre, Dundee: Dundee Oral History Project Archive, Interview with Bella Keyzer, DOHP 022, interview by Elizabeth Feeney, recorded 14/11/1985 and 25/11/1985. DWT; Holdsworth, A. (1988) Out of the Dolls’ House: the story of women in the twentieth century; *ODNB (2004); Smith, G. (1990) ‘None Can Compare’, in B. Kay (ed.) The Dundee Book.

DBE, m. Macdonald, born Carriden, Bo’ness, 14 March 1900, died Cambridge 22 March 1989. Pioneer lawyer. Daughter of Janet Gardner Turnbull, teacher, and James Kidd, solicitor, MP for West Lothian. At a time when few careers were open to women, Margaret Kidd, the eldest of nine children, benefited from her father’s example, making her own career in the law. After attending Linlithgow Academy, she graduated in law at the University of Edinburgh in 1922, and the following year was the first woman to be admitted to the Scottish Bar. Becoming a member of the Faculty of Advocates, she was the second British woman to practise as an advocate. Until 1949, Margaret Kidd remained the only female representative on the faculty, but never prosecuted for the Crown. She defended capably, often in poignant family cases, such as that of a mother who had accidentally smothered her child. In a brief sortie into politics at the request of the Unionist Party, she stood for a by-election in 1928 in West Lothian, but lost to Independent Labour candidate Manny Shinwell. She married in 1930 Donald S. Macdonald (d. 1958), a fellow lawyer, and they had one daughter. Active in other fields, Margaret Kidd in 1946 became a reporter for the Scots Law Times and editor of the Court of Session Reports until 1976. In 1948, she became the first woman KC (Scotland) and was later Sheriff Principal of Dumfries and Galloway (1960–6) and Sheriff Principal of Perth and Angus (1966–74). She was created DBE in 1975. Keeper of the Advocates Library for 14 years, she eventually received the title of ‘Father [sic] of the Scottish Bar’, as well as honorary degrees from Dundee (1982) and Edinburgh (1984). A strong personality, she paved the way for other women in her profession. ls

• Cowan, M. G., Williamson, M. G., Kidd, M. H., Martin, J. (1924) Political Realism by Four Scottish Unionists; ODNB (2004); SB; The Times, 26 March 1989 (obit.); Who’s Who.

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KING KING, Ellen Elizabeth, m1 MacPherson, m2 Pearson, born Renfrew 16 Jan. 1909, died Parkgate,

Jessie King was labelled a callous baby-farmer, a woman who took in babies for money with the intention of killing them, a concern that lay behind the introduction of the Infant Life Protection Act 1872. It is likely, however, that she was a vulnerable working-class woman whose solution to her financial and emotional instability was to take advantage of desperate mothers of illegitimate babies and the lax adoption laws. lca

Cheshire, Feb. 1994. Swimming champion. Daughter of Florence Pearson, and Benjamin King, storekeeper. Ellen King, who attended James Gillespie’s School, Edinburgh, was described as one of the world’s greatest all-round swimmers in 1928. She was one of the few Scottish women to win Olympic medals that year: silver in both the 100 yards backstroke and the 100 yards freestyle relay at the Amsterdam Olympic Games. As women’s captain of the Scottish team at the 1930 inaugural Empire Games, Hamilton, Canada, she won silver in the 100 yards freestyle and bronze in the 400 yards freestyle. In total, Ellen King won six British swimming championships, two Olympic and two Commonwealth medals and set two world records. In 1927, she set a world best of 3 minutes, 2 seconds in the 200 yards breaststroke and the following year a world best of 1 minute, 57.2 seconds in the 150 yards backstroke. In 1945, she married Bobby McPherson, taxicab hirer, who died in 1957. Ellen King taught swimming in Edinburgh schools until her retirement in 1974. That year she remarried, to Alfred Pearson, a retired builder. One of only five women to appear among the first 50 athletes to be inducted into the Scottish Sports Hall of Fame in 2002, she was arguably the best all-round swimmer of her era. gj

• NRS: JC26/1408 High Court Process; AD14/89/146 ­precognition. Abrams, L. (1998) The Orphan Country: children of Scotland’s broken homes, 1845 to the present day; Arnot, M. L. (1994) ‘Infant death, child care and the state: the baby-farming scandal and the first Infant Life Protection Legislation of 1872’, Continuity & Change, 9, pp. 271–311.

• ‘Scotland’s 100 Greatest Sporting Moments’, Part 2, Scotland on Sunday, 16 Sept. 2001, p. 18. ‘History’ at www.cgcs.org.uk Additional information: Anne Lynas Shah. KING (or Kean), Jessie, born Glasgow 27 March 1861, died Edinburgh 11 March 1889. Childminder. Daughter of Grace Liddell, and James Kean, warper. Jessie King moved, following her mother’s death, from Glasgow to Edinburgh where she worked as a laundress. She met and moved in with the much older Thomas Pearson. In 1887, her threeweek-old child died. She then ‘adopted’ at least three babies; all either disappeared or were found dead in suspicious circumstances. The discovery of the third on waste land prompted her arrest. In court, Jessie King was described as a small, slight woman, dressed respectably and older in appearance than her 27 years. She was found guilty of murder and sentenced to hang on 11 March 1889, an unusually harsh punishment. She had given birth to another child just a few months before her arrest and tried to end her own life in prison.

KING, Jessie Marion, m. Taylor, born Bearsden 20 March 1875, died Kirkcudbright 3 August 1949. Illustrator and designer. Daughter of Mary Ann Anderson, and Rev. James W. King. Jessie M. King studied at Queen Margaret College and GSA, quickly achieving recognition for her imaginative book illustration in a distinctive rhythmic linear style which regularly featured in The Studio magazine, and for which she received a gold medal at the Turin International Exhibition in 1902. Often based on legends and fairy tales, her work was also exhibited in Berlin, Calcutta and Cork. From 1899, she taught design for the bookbinding course at GSA; in 1904 she took temporary charge of the Embroidery Department and in 1907 taught ceramic design. The most commercially successful of the designers associated with the Glasgow Style, her diverse work included silver, jewellery and textiles, some of which was sold by Liberty & Co., as well as gesso panels, wallpapers, posters, bookplates and costumes for masques and pageants. Later she designed interiors and mural decoration. In 1908, she married Ernest Archibald Taylor (1874–1951) but, always independently minded, she retained her own name, unusually for the time. They had one daughter. Ernest Taylor’s career as a designer took them to Manchester and in 1911 to Paris, where they established a small studio gallery. During this time, Jessie M. King discovered the technique of batik, which she continued to develop after their enforced return to Scotland on the outbreak of the First World War. They settled in Greengate Close, Kirkcudbright, which became a focus for her many friends in the GSLA with whom she regularly exhibited. Here she produced

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quantities of decorated ceramics as well as watercolour paintings. Summers were spent on Arran where she and her husband held sketching classes. Her reputation has risen steadily after a long period of eclipse. la

Scottish Working People’s History Trust; Robertson, B. (1990) ‘In bondage: the female farm worker in south-east Scotland’, in E. Gordon and E. Breitenbach (eds) The World is Ill-Divided.

• Univ. of Glasgow Library, Special Collections: Jessie M. King Collection. Burkhauser, J. (ed.) (1990) Glasgow Girls, pp. 133–9; Cumming, E. (ed.) (1992) Glasgow 1900 Art & Design, (2006) Hand, Heart and Soul: the Arts and Crafts Movement in Scotland; MSW; ODNB (2004); (1977) The Private Library, second series, 10, 3, Autumn, ‘Towards a checklist of books illustrated by Jessie M. King’; White, C. (ed.) (1989) The Enchanted World of Jessie M. King. KING, Mary, n. Kerr, born Bellshiel, near Swinton, Berwickshire, 12 Dec. 1905, died Edinburgh 25 May 1998. Bondager and domestic servant. Daughter of Isabella Paxton, domestic servant, and Andrew Kerr, ploughman. The eldest of eight children, Mary Kerr was born out of wedlock; her parents married soon after her birth. The family lived in a series of tied cottages without running water, as her father moved from farm to farm in the Borders. After village school at St Abbs and Coldingham, she left at 13 to become first a domestic helper, then a bondager to her father at Temple Hall Farm, Reston, where he was first ploughman: ‘Ah didnae sign any papers, nothing like that . . . Ah wid jist be telt, “Ye’re gaun tae work oot.” And that wis that’. The work included singling (thinning) turnips, planting and digging potatoes, mucking out byres, repairing sacks, driving a cart, stooking sheaves at harvest and loading. As a bondager, she worked the same hours as the men: 6am to 6pm or longer, six days a week, for 13s (65p), rising after three or four years to £1. But the farmer never handed her her wages: they went into her father’s pay packet. After moving to a farm near Duns with the family, she left home at 19 to become a kitchen maid, making way for her sisters to replace her as bondager. In 1928, she married a local woodcutter and they had four children, one of whom died in infancy. Mary King had to give up her job on marriage, but later worked part-time in the fields. One of very few Scottish bondagers whose life has been recorded in depth, she said in retrospect, ‘Ah think the fields wis hard, awfy hard work, and gey often in a’ weathers’. im ac d

• Interview with Mary King by Ian MacDougall, 1997 (source of all quotations). MacDougall, I. (2001) Bondagers,

born Edinburgh c. 1826/27, died Edinburgh 26 April 1914. Governess and headmistress. Daughter of Mary Smith, and John Gardiner Kinnear, Glasgow merchant. Educated at home, Georgina Kinnear, then in her 30s, was permitted by her parents to accompany family friends to The Hague and then to St Petersburg in 1860. After becoming fluent in Russian, she was governess to the family of Nicolai Milyutin, radical politician in the liberal government of Tsar Alexander II, who reputedly consulted her about British political methods (Murray 1914, p. 529). The secondary and higher education of women and girls had become of particular interest to her and she returned to Britain permanently in 1874 to promote this. After gaining experience at Cheltenham Ladies’ College, in 1877 she was appointed, at *Louisa Lumsden’s request, as a founder member of staff at St Andrews School for Girls (later St Leonards School). In 1880 she was appointed the first headmistress of The Park School, Glasgow, where she remained for 20 years. A stimulating and original teacher, and an ardent Liberal and reformer, she was ‘a charming but formidable woman, full of new ideas of a woman’s place in the world’ (Lightwood 1980, p. 29). lrm

KINNEAR, Georgina,

• NRS: ED17/97 (school inspection reports); Univ. of Leeds, Brotherton Library Special Collections: MS 851 (20th century corr. about Kinnear). Kinnear, G. (1904) The Use of Words. Lightwood, J. (1980) The Park School, 1880–1980; Murray, M. (1914) ‘Georgina Kinnear’, The Journal of Education, July, pp. 529–30; *ODNB (2004); The Park School, Glasgow, 1880–1930 (1930).

n. Murray, born Torphins, Aberdeenshire, 10 April 1906, died Dunfermline 4 Nov. 1996. Nurse in Spanish Civil War. Daughter of Anne Cargill, and George Wilson Murray, tenant farmer. One of eight children – two brothers, Tom and George, fought in the International Brigades – Annie Murray finished training as a nurse at Edinburgh Royal Infirmary in 1936, just as the Spanish Civil War began. She had already been politically active, getting nurses to protest at conditions in the Infirmary, and she joined the

KNIGHT, Annie Cargill,

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Communist Party that year. ‘I went to Spain’, she said, ‘because I believed in the cause of the Spanish Republican government’. One of the first British volunteers to arrive there, via the British Medical Aid Association, she was a nurse with Republican forces, at first at a small hospital in Huete, then with a Spanish medical group at a hospital in Barcelona, where she worked with Dr Quemada for the rest of the war, sometimes in hospital trains under bombardment. Most of her patients were Spanish Republican troops or International Brigaders, but included North African prisoners of war. Annie Murray left Barcelona as Franco’s troops entered it, and recalled seeing atrocities caused by booby-trapped bombs during the retreat. The Spanish war ‘had a terrific impact on me’, she recalled. Later she worked in London, in civil defence, in nursing, and then in the Post Office until her retirement. In 1948, she had married Frank Knight, and they moved in 1978 to Cairneyhill near Dunfermline, dying within a few months of each other. im ac d

any broadcast attacking the religious values of the UK. However, receiving hidden support at the BBC, her lectures went ahead on 5 and 12 January, and were subsequently published as a book. Uproar followed, with virtually every UK national and local newspaper berating her views and the BBC’s decision to broadcast them. For over a month she was door-stepped by journalists, vilified and caricatured as a ‘barren’ (childless) woman who had left her natural sphere, while the BBC was accused of letting in godless communism. BBC TV was soon transformed by atheist views and sixties’ secularity, though radio remained less reformed. Margaret Knight enjoyed some stature in humanist circles, being honoured by secularist leaders like A. J. Ayer and Bertrand Russell. She became president of the Glasgow humanist group, now the Humanist Society Scotland. She campaigned on many issues, including the denial of women’s contraception, the Catholic Church’s hounding of women who had had abortions, and the teaching in schools of eternal torment. CGB

• Imperial War Museum, Oral History, cat. 11318; sound interview. MacDougall, I. (1986) Voices from the Spanish Civil War, (2000) Voices from Work and Home; The Herald, Nov. 1996 (obit.).

• AUL Special Collections: MS3133, Margaret Knight Papers. Selected works: A. R. and M. Knight (1948) A Modern Introduction to Psychology; M. Knight (1955) Morality Without Religion: and other essays (ed.), (1961) Humanist Anthology: from Confucius to Bertrand Russell, (1974) Honest to Man: Christian ethics re-examined. Brown, C. G. (2012) ‘“The unholy Mrs Knight” and the BBC: secular humanism and the threat to the Christian nation, c. 1945–60’, English Historical Review vol. 127, pp. 345–76; *eODNB.

n. Horsey, born Waltham Cross, Herts., 23 Nov. 1903, died Aberdeenshire 10 May 1983. Humanist campaigner, psychologist and broadcaster. Daughter of Katherine Marion Edwards, and Ernest Percival, schoolmaster. Margaret Horsey, educated at Roedean and Girton College, Cambridge, in the Moral Sciences Tripos, in 1936 married Arthur Rex Knight (1903–61), professor in Psychology, University of Aberdeen. She worked initially as a psychology lecturer at Dunfermline College of Physical Education, then from 1938 assistant lecturer (from 1948 lecturer) at the University of Aberdeen, until her retirement in 1970. Having lost her Christian faith upon reading Bertrand Russell at Cambridge, she wrote works on humanist philosophy and on psychology. Margaret Knight became famous overnight in January 1955 for two lectures on the BBC Home Service in which she advocated raising children in such a way as to impart ‘morality without religion’. Unknown to her, she faced opposition to her broadcast from the Religious and the Talks Departments of the BBC, which sought to prevent

KNIGHT, Margaret Kennedy,

KNIGHT, Mary Joan, OBE, born Walton-le-Dale, Lancs., 27 Sept. 1924, died Perth 20 Dec. 1996. Theatre director. Daughter of Mary Cottam, and Henry Knight, market gardener. Joan Knight directed from the age of five, producing plays at home on rainy days. Leaving school at 15, she became a Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries secretary and also volunteered for the Land Army. Despite her youth, she directed for many amateur societies around Preston, qualified as LRAM and taught English and Drama at St Anne’s College, St Anne’s-on-Sea. In 1951, she took Bristol Old Vic Theatre School’s one-year special technical course. Her stage management career started with Midland Theatre Company (1952–5), followed by Perth Theatre where she first directed professionally in 1957. Thereafter, she directed widely in the English regions, first directing a company of her own at Whitby (1958–60) and then becoming artistic director at the Castle Theatre, Farnham

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(­ 1960–4). After further freelance years, including directing Patrick Stewart’s 1965 Shylock at Bristol Old Vic, in 1968 she became artistic director of Perth Theatre (see Dence, Marjorie). She remained industrious and in demand, also running, for example, the Ludlow Festival for three years in the late 1960s, directing, among others, a wellremembered 1969 Romeo and Juliet, and resolving a crisis in 1976 and 1977 by serving as Pitlochry Festival Theatre’s director of productions. She directed for most major regional playhouses. Her range is demonstrated by the fact that in addition to work at the Royal Court Theatre, invited there by Bill Gaskill to join his directing team, she was responsible for six annual West End re-­directions of The Mousetrap. Early in her Perth career, Laurence Olivier offered her a National Theatre directorship, but she believed her art was best fulfilled by long-term commitment within a community. Even after her 1993 retirement, she directed, in her three remaining years, six plays at Pitlochry, concluding with a ­memorable ­production of Bridie’s Mr Bolfry starring Jimmy Logan, nephew of *Georgina Allan. Joan Knight was a renowned mentor. Important figures in all branches of theatre

learned their crafts under her care. An attentive and perceptive director, she had the rare skills required to bring new drafts to full production. Committed to her art form’s development, she served on the SAC drama and several other committees, becoming a council member (1980–6). She was also a governor of Queen Margaret University College (QMUC) (1983–8) and board member of Perth College (1993–6). She was made OBE in 1985. In the early 1990s, Lord Palumbo, then Chairman of the ACGB, with the support of the SAC twice strongly recommended her for a DBE; metropolitan myopia may have blocked both proposals. During her lifetime, theatre directors were predominantly Oxbridge-educated men. Setting her own mould, Joan Knight shaped Scottish and British theatre both directly and through her myriad protégés. She was made Hon DLitt by QMUC in 1996. ib • Interviews with Christopher Denys, Isobel Lister (QMUC), Professor Clive Perry, Jeanette Tosh (Perth College), Antony Tuckey, Helen Williamson (Pitlochry Festival Theatre), Joyce Whiteside. The Scotsman, 23 Dec. 1996 (obit.) Personal knowledge.

L m. Hogg, born Ettrick 1730, died Ettrick 1813. Tradition-bearer. Daughter of Bessie Scott, and William Laidlaw, tenant farmer. Margaret Laidlaw is remembered through the writing of her son, James Hogg (1770–1835). She was the eldest daughter of William Laidlaw (‘Will o’ Phaup’), an authority on traditional culture (as was her brother William), who was the tenant of Old Upper Phawhope, in Ettrick. In 1765, she married Robert Hogg (c. 1729–92), the tenant farmer of Ettrick House and Ettrick Hall, and they had four sons. Her most famous appearance is in James Hogg’s Familiar Anecdotes of Sir Walter Scott (1834), as a commentator on Scott’s editing of her songs in The Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border (1802–3): ‘they war made for singing, an’ no for reading; and they’re nouther right spelled nor right setten down’ (Bold 2000, pp.116–17). Scott wrote that Margaret Laidlaw, ‘sings, or rather chants . . . with great animation’ (ibid., p.122). James Hogg was surprised at the extent

LAIDLAW, Margaret,

of his mother’s repertoire, leading Elaine Petrie to argue that her passive repertoire was activated by the Minstrelsy collection (Petrie 1983, pp.34–8). James Hogg’s brother William, in the New Monthly Magazine of 1836, says their mother was a skilled narrator of ‘tales and songs of spectres, ghosts, fairies, brownies, voices, &c. These had been both seen and heard in her time in the Glen of Phaup’. She was a deeply religious woman, and made sure her children knew their psalms. There are tantalising glimpses of Margaret Laidlaw in James Hogg’s work, in the spirited mother of ‘The Marvellous Doctor’ in Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, 21 (1827) and the reductive Scots-speaker of ‘The Love Adventures of George Cochrane’ in Winter Evening Tales (1820) vol. 1. She instructed him to set ‘Athol Cummers’ in Songs (1831): ‘O man, it’s a shame to hear sic a good tune an’ nae words till’t. Gae away ben the house, like a good lad, and mak’ me a verse till’t’ (p. 191). In 1813, Hogg described his mother as ‘the best friend that 238

LAIDLAW

(­ 1960–4). After further freelance years, including directing Patrick Stewart’s 1965 Shylock at Bristol Old Vic, in 1968 she became artistic director of Perth Theatre (see Dence, Marjorie). She remained industrious and in demand, also running, for example, the Ludlow Festival for three years in the late 1960s, directing, among others, a wellremembered 1969 Romeo and Juliet, and resolving a crisis in 1976 and 1977 by serving as Pitlochry Festival Theatre’s director of productions. She directed for most major regional playhouses. Her range is demonstrated by the fact that in addition to work at the Royal Court Theatre, invited there by Bill Gaskill to join his directing team, she was responsible for six annual West End re-­directions of The Mousetrap. Early in her Perth career, Laurence Olivier offered her a National Theatre directorship, but she believed her art was best fulfilled by long-term commitment within a community. Even after her 1993 retirement, she directed, in her three remaining years, six plays at Pitlochry, concluding with a ­memorable ­production of Bridie’s Mr Bolfry starring Jimmy Logan, nephew of *Georgina Allan. Joan Knight was a renowned mentor. Important figures in all branches of theatre

learned their crafts under her care. An attentive and perceptive director, she had the rare skills required to bring new drafts to full production. Committed to her art form’s development, she served on the SAC drama and several other committees, becoming a council member (1980–6). She was also a governor of Queen Margaret University College (QMUC) (1983–8) and board member of Perth College (1993–6). She was made OBE in 1985. In the early 1990s, Lord Palumbo, then Chairman of the ACGB, with the support of the SAC twice strongly recommended her for a DBE; metropolitan myopia may have blocked both proposals. During her lifetime, theatre directors were predominantly Oxbridge-educated men. Setting her own mould, Joan Knight shaped Scottish and British theatre both directly and through her myriad protégés. She was made Hon DLitt by QMUC in 1996. ib • Interviews with Christopher Denys, Isobel Lister (QMUC), Professor Clive Perry, Jeanette Tosh (Perth College), Antony Tuckey, Helen Williamson (Pitlochry Festival Theatre), Joyce Whiteside. The Scotsman, 23 Dec. 1996 (obit.) Personal knowledge.

L m. Hogg, born Ettrick 1730, died Ettrick 1813. Tradition-bearer. Daughter of Bessie Scott, and William Laidlaw, tenant farmer. Margaret Laidlaw is remembered through the writing of her son, James Hogg (1770–1835). She was the eldest daughter of William Laidlaw (‘Will o’ Phaup’), an authority on traditional culture (as was her brother William), who was the tenant of Old Upper Phawhope, in Ettrick. In 1765, she married Robert Hogg (c. 1729–92), the tenant farmer of Ettrick House and Ettrick Hall, and they had four sons. Her most famous appearance is in James Hogg’s Familiar Anecdotes of Sir Walter Scott (1834), as a commentator on Scott’s editing of her songs in The Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border (1802–3): ‘they war made for singing, an’ no for reading; and they’re nouther right spelled nor right setten down’ (Bold 2000, pp.116–17). Scott wrote that Margaret Laidlaw, ‘sings, or rather chants . . . with great animation’ (ibid., p.122). James Hogg was surprised at the extent

LAIDLAW, Margaret,

of his mother’s repertoire, leading Elaine Petrie to argue that her passive repertoire was activated by the Minstrelsy collection (Petrie 1983, pp.34–8). James Hogg’s brother William, in the New Monthly Magazine of 1836, says their mother was a skilled narrator of ‘tales and songs of spectres, ghosts, fairies, brownies, voices, &c. These had been both seen and heard in her time in the Glen of Phaup’. She was a deeply religious woman, and made sure her children knew their psalms. There are tantalising glimpses of Margaret Laidlaw in James Hogg’s work, in the spirited mother of ‘The Marvellous Doctor’ in Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, 21 (1827) and the reductive Scots-speaker of ‘The Love Adventures of George Cochrane’ in Winter Evening Tales (1820) vol. 1. She instructed him to set ‘Athol Cummers’ in Songs (1831): ‘O man, it’s a shame to hear sic a good tune an’ nae words till’t. Gae away ben the house, like a good lad, and mak’ me a verse till’t’ (p. 191). In 1813, Hogg described his mother as ‘the best friend that 238

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ever I had’ (Miller 2003, p. 15) and his affection is reflected in ‘A Last Adieu’, in Blackwood’s 1 (1817). Margaret Laidlaw was a profound influence on the writer of The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner (1824). vb • Bold, V. (2000) ‘ “Nouther right spelled nor right setten down”: Scott, Child and the Hogg Family Ballads’ in E. J. Cowan (ed.) The Ballad in Scottish History; Hogg, J. (1827) ‘The shepherd’s calendar’, Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, 21, pp. 440–5; [1834] (1972) Memoir of the Author’s Life and Familiar Anecdotes of Sir Walter Scott, D. S. Mack, ed.; Miller, K. (2003) The Electric Shepherd; Petrie, E. (1983) ‘Odd characters: traditional informants in James Hogg’s family’, Scottish Literary Journal, 10, 1. LAIDLAW, Robena Anna (later Anna Robena), m. Thomson, born Bretton, Yorkshire, 30 April 1819,

died London 29 May 1901. Pianist. Daughter of Ann Keddy, and Alexander Laidlaw, merchant. Robena Laidlaw was born into a well-placed Borders family, intimate with Sir Walter Scott. In 1827 they moved to Edinburgh where she studied with Robert Müller, continuing her studies in Königsberg in 1830. In her teens she performed in Berlin, Leipzig and, in 1832, at Paganini’s farewell concert in London: he wrote of the ‘prodigious effect she produced’, professing ‘never to have heard [the piano] treated so magnificently’ (Patterson 1903, p.91). Further study followed in London. In 1837, she became intimate with Schumann, who suggested she transpose her first names as being ‘more musical’. She was the dedicatee of his Fantasiestücke, Opus 12: ‘I have not asked for permission to make this dedication, but they belong to you, and the whole “Rosenthal” with its romantic surroundings, is in the music’ (ibid., p.98) – a reference to a walk in the Rose Valley when Schumann gave her a flawless rose. Of her personality, he wrote that it ‘united English solidity and natural amiability’, and of her playing, in the Leipzig Gewandhaus, that it was ‘thoroughly good and individual’ (Neue Zeitschrift für Musik, 11 Sept. 1837). Following a tour in Prussia, Russia and Austria, Anna Laidlaw was appointed pianist to the Queen of Hanover, but settled in London in 1840. In 1852, she married George Thomson, a fellow Scot, and this ended her career. They had four daughters. jp

• Farmer, H. G. (1947) A History of Music in Scotland, pp. 449–50; Nauhaus, G. (1987) Robert Schumann Tagebücher, Band II 1836–54, pp. 22, 33 and note, 279, 303, 319; ODNB (2004); Patterson, A. W. (1903, rev. edn. 1934) Schumann, pp. 90–9.

born Edinburgh 22 Feb. 1862, died 15 March 1949. Deaconess and president, Church of Scotland Woman’s Guild. Daughter of Elizabeth Thomas Deans, and William Lamond, Advocate. When Mary Lamond succeeded Lady Polwarth as president of the Woman’s Guild in 1920, she had already served the church as a deaconess for 26 years, including time as head of the training house for the order, which provided residential training courses for women preparing for full-time mission work at home and abroad. A woman of considerable administrative skills, she had previously been secretary of the Guild for six years and had also edited its supplement to the Church’s magazine, Life & Work. Her organisational abilities were instrumental in streamlining this burgeoning movement and in giving it much-needed cohesion. The grouping of guilds in Presbyterial Councils, the tradition of national office bearers paying visits to all councils, and the large annual meeting continue to the present day. Her presidency (1920–32) spanned the years of the general strike and depression and she responded to the consequent social deprivation by mobilising the practical skills of Guild members in providing food, linen and clothing for the needy. She was also determined that women’s voices should be heard and organised courses in public speaking for Guild members, as well as encouraging participation in group discussions. Her experience and clear thinking helped to merge the two women’s organisations of the denominations involved in the union of 1929. In retirement she remained open to new challenges, reading history and learning Hebrew in order to study the psalms. at

LAMOND, Mary,

• Church of Scotland Guild (1957) Through the Years: some aspects of guild life and work; Magnusson, M. (1987) Out of Silence; ODNB (2004). LAMONT STEWART, Murdina May (Ena), n. Lamont,

born Glasgow 10 Feb. 1912, died Dalmellington 9 Feb. 2006. Playwright. Daughter of Euphemia Anne Hume, and Murdoch Lamont, Church of Scotland minister. Despite Ena Lamont’s comfortable upbringing, the extreme poverty she witnessed in the area of Glasgow where her father was minister remained with her. In the 1930s, she worked as librarian in Aberdeen, then medical secretary and receptionist in Glasgow, again closely observing deprivation and substandard housing’s impact. She married actor Jack Stewart and had one son. *Molly Urquhart’s MSU Theatre in Rutherglen performed her first substantial play, Distinguished Company 239

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(1942), and Glasgow Unity Theatre premiered her hospital-set Starched Aprons (1945). In 1947, by which time her marriage had failed, Unity’s professional company (est. 1946) presented her most famous play, Men Should Weep, exploring extreme poverty, Glaswegian machismo and women’s ­oppression – and, despite the suicide of the lead character Maggie, resistance. This play’s success foreshadowed English kitchen-sink drama by a decade, but Ena Lamont Stewart’s career stuttered. This was perhaps because of Unity’s left-wing reputation; perhaps too the hostility of James Bridie – co-founder of rival Citizens’ Theatre, powerful Arts Council figure and fierce critic of Unity’s financial management. Or perhaps it was simply because, in patriarchal times, she was a woman. In the 1950s and ’60s, she earned her living running Glasgow’s Baillie’s Reference Library; her only play performed was The Heir to Ardmally, a conventional family drama (Pitlochry 1958). Nonetheless, fellow playwrights regarded her highly: with Hector MacMillan and John Hall, she helped establish the Scottish Society of Playwrights (SSP 1973), serving on its early Councils. After long neglect, the SSP’s 1975 Netherbow programme featured her one-acters Towards Evening and Walkies Time for a Black Poodle. The women’s movement of the 1970s inspired Ena Lamont Stewart to rewrite Men Should Weep, abandoning Maggie’s suicide, leaving her defiantly alive. 7:84 Theatre Company’s 1982 Clydebuilt season saw this version rapturously received, with *Liz McLennan in the lead. In 1985, 7:84 presented High Places, exploring life in high-rise blocks, and Ena Lamont Stewart became SSP’s second Honorary Life President (after Robert McLellan). She was unassuming, quiet-spoken, even genteel, and wryly amused – far from the firebrand her plays might suggest. It is impossible to assess how her writing might have developed with more encouragement, but she unstintingly encouraged fellow playwrights. Men Should Weep was included in London’s Royal National Theatre’s (RNT) NT2000 100 most significant twentieth-century plays, revived to acclaim by the RNT (2010) and Scottish National Theatre (2011), and featured in Michael Billington’s 2015 ‘101 greatest plays’ in any language. IB • Findlay, B., Works as above, and (1998) (ed.) A History of Scottish Theatre; (2008) (ed.) Scottish People’s Theatre: plays by Glasgow Unity Writers. Billington, M. (2015) The 101 Greatest Plays: from antiquity to the present; Brown, I. (2013) Scottish Theatre: diversity,­

l­ anguage, continuity; The Scotsman, 17 Feb. 2006 (obit.). Personal knowledge.

n. Ross, born London 22 Nov. 1933, died Glasgow 27 April 1983. Historian. Daughter of Nella Wallace, and John Ross, senior civil servant. The daughter of highly educated parents, Christina Ross gained her PhD from the University of Edinburgh in 1962. She subsequently became senior lecturer and, briefly, Professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Glasgow. She had married Professor John Larner, a historian of Renaissance Italy, in 1960, and they had two sons. Christina Larner acquired an admirable academic reputation during her lifetime: in 1982, she was asked to give the Gifford lectures. However, particular acclaim has come to her posthumously for her work on European and particularly Scottish witchcraft. Her growing reputation is based largely on two books: the first, A Source-book of Scottish Witchcraft (1977, 2005), was compiled jointly with Christopher Hyde Lee and Hugh V. McLachlan, and is still the most authoritative general reference work on the topic. Even more significant is Enemies of God (1981), a book in which she addressed what have become the acknowledged central questions regarding witchcraft accusations and prosecution, with particular reference to Scotland in the 16th and 17th centuries. She considered witch-hunting as a sort of women-hunting, and argued that it was a ‘. . . rearguard action against the emergence of women as independent adults . . .’ (1981, p. 101). Kirsty, as she was known socially, loved playing the cello, fly-fishing for trout and drinking malt whisky. After long and recurrent periods of illness, borne with inspiring stoicism, she died aged 49. hm c l LARNER, Christina (Kirsty),

• Larner, C., Works as above and (1982) The Thinking Peasant (The Gifford Lectures), (1983) Witchcraft and Religion. Private information: John Larner and Gavin Larner. LAUDERDALE, Elizabeth, Duchess of see MURRAY, Lady Elizabeth, Countess of Dysart (baptised 1626,

d. 1698)

n. Gray, born Aberdeen, 4 Feb. 1849, died Edinburgh 17 Sept. 1921. Teacher, translator, missionary. Daughter of Mary Gordon, and Charles Gray, clerk. The fifth of nine children, Margaret Gray grew up in a household where learning was encouraged. A dictionary and an atlas were kept at the ready on the

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family dinner table. She attended the Sunday school at St Nicholas Lane United Presbyterian church, run by Janet Melville, which produced several missionaries, including her future husband, Robert Laws (1851–1934). Having trained and worked as a teacher, Margaret Gray became engaged to Robert Laws in 1875 and, after a long engagement while he became established as a medical missionary, they married in Africa in 1879. Their only child, Amelia Nyasa Laws, born 1886, was sent back to Scotland for her education at the age of eight. For most of her 40 years at Livingstonia, Nyasaland (now Malawi), Margaret Laws concentrated on teaching, studying the Chinyanja language, and producing religious and educational material in that language. During visits to Scotland she was in great demand as a speaker. She returned to Scotland in failing health and died there. atm • UAL: Special Archives. MS 3290, partially catalogued material relating to the Laws Family; Univ. of Edinburgh, New College Archives: Laws papers. Laws, R. (1886) Women’s Work in Livingstonia; McIntosh, H. (1993) Robert Laws, Servant of Africa; Thomson, D. P. (1975) Women of the Scottish Church. LEE, Janet (Jennie), Baroness of Asheridge,‡ m. Bevan, born Lochgelly, Fife, 3 Nov. 1904, died

London 16 Nov. 1988. Politician, writer and lecturer. Daughter of Euphemia Greig, cook and hotel manager, and James Lee, coal miner, hotel manager and ILP activist. Brought up in Fife, one of two surviving children, Jennie Lee was educated at Beath Secondary School and the University of Edinburgh, graduating MA and LLB and with a teaching certificate and diploma in education. An ILP activist, she won the North Lanark Labour selection over the miners’ nominee, overturning a Tory majority at the 1929 by-election and becoming the youngest woman elected to the House of Commons. Beautiful and passionate, she made an immediate impact, linking herself with figures of the left such as James Maxton, Ellen Wilkinson, and Frank Wise, a married man with whom she fell in love. After Frank Wise’s sudden death in 1933, she married leading Labour politician Aneurin (Nye) Bevan (1897–1960) in October 1934, inaugurating a long partnership. Defeated at the 1931 National Government landslide, Jennie Lee became involved in bitter disputes involving party discipline versus principle. She could not bear to leave the ILP over the break with Labour, an attitude that led Nye Bevan

to call her ‘my Salvation Army lassie’ (Brown 1988, p. 310). The decision sidelined her as Bevan became better known. Although she kept her own name, ‘[over] the years, the balance in their marriage changed’ to the point of what Barbara Castle called ‘Nyedolatry’ (Hollis 1997, p. 84). Failure to recapture North Lanark in 1935 took her out of Scottish politics, but in 1945 she was elected MP for Cannock and closely supported Nye Bevan in his role as leader of the Labour left and Minister of Health after 1945, sharing in his victories and defeats. His death in 1960 devastated her and ‘she felt that he had been murdered [by attacks upon him]’ (DNB 1991, p. 260). When later she was promoted by Harold Wilson, the most notable of her political appointments was as first Minister for the Arts from 1964 to 1970. She gave the arts a public profile for the first time. She was also the chief architect of the Open University, set up in 1971, the lasting legacy of this controversial and charismatic politician who had lost her Cannock seat in 1970. Jennie Lee did not identify with the promotion of women in politics per se, stating, ‘I shall always vote on policy issues, not on the sex of the candidate’ (Lee 1981, p. 168). However, her suppression of her own career in favour of Bevan’s was ‘all the more remarkable because as a woman in politics she had always laid claim to a “male” life, public, itinerant, and unencumbered by family responsibilities’ (Hollis 1997, p. viii). At the same time she had the benefit of support from her Scottish family, most notably her mother, ‘Ma Lee’, who lived with and cared for her for many years both before and after Nye’s death. She became a life peer in 1970, and was awarded an honorary LLD from the University of Cambridge in 1974. cb • Open Univ. Library Archival Collection, Walton Hall: Jennie Lee corr. Lee, J. (1939) Tomorrow is a New Day, (1981) My Life with Nye. Brown, G. (1988) Maxton; DNB (1991); Hollis, P. (1997 and 2014) Jennie Lee: a life ; ODNB (2004).

n. Wilson, baptised Skene, Aberdeenshire 16 Aug. 1812, died Aberdeen 27 May 1884. Chartist. Daughter of Janet Pirie, crofter, and John Wilson, crofter and auctioneer. Isabella Wilson married John Legge, a stonemason and Chartist, around 1835. She retained her maiden name as a middle name. The couple moved to Aberdeen, where she founded the Aberdeen Female Radical Union, a Chartist organisation, around 1839. The group met in the

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Temperance Hotel, Queen Street. The Female Radicals hosted Chartist visitors to Aberdeen, including Feargus O’Connor in 1841 and T. S. Duncombe in 1843. Both were presented with a tartan plaid and silver brooch by the women. In 1842, the group issued an address to their fellow countrywomen, signed by Mary Angus. It included the words ‘It has been stated that women should not meddle with politics . . . if politics did not meddle with them then the prohibition might be just – but the woman who values her home will endeavour to drive everything from it that threatens to do injury to its welfare . . .’. Isabella Wilson Legge had five children, all of whom were given the middle name ‘Wilson’. She was widowed in 1872. ATM • Northern Star, 6 Nov. 1841, 13 Nov. 1841, 4 June 1842, 4 Nov. 1843. LEIGH, Margaret Mary, born Oxford 17 Dec. 1894, died Inverness 7 April 1973. Author and farmer. Daughter of Alice Maud Bayliss, and Henry Devenish Leigh, Oxford don. After her father’s death in 1903, Margaret Leigh and her mother remained in Oxford. She attended the High School, and won a classical scholarship to Somerville College in 1913. After completing her studies, in 1919 she was appointed lecturer in Classics at the University of Reading, a lifelong dream. However, as a woman, she considered her chances of promotion limited and left academia in 1924. Moving with her mother to Plockton, Wester Ross, she developed a strong interest in agriculture and in the Highlands and islands. After returning to Oxford to do a Dip. Agric., she applied her knowledge to farming and reclaiming derelict holdings in the western Highlands and on Bodmin moor in Cornwall. Her autobiography, The Fruit in the Seed (1952), charts her spiritual journey and eventual conversion to Catholicism in 1948; in 1950 she entered a Carmelite convent. Her writing career started with fictional works, but she gained acclaim with books of an autobiographical cast. Spade among the Rushes (1949, 1996) recounted her attempt to bring a croft back into cultivation in Moidart. She also wrote essays on agricultural and environmental matters: her analysis of crofting (Leigh 1928–9) is one of the earliest scientific studies exploring the origins of the socio-economic situation of the Highlands. Her work is illustrative of the line of thought supporting the regeneration of the Highlands

and the value of the traditional way of life of the crofting population. lg • Leigh, M., Works as above and (1922) The Passing of the Pengwerns, (1928–9) ‘The Crofting Problem, 1790–1883’, Scot. Jour. Agric. xi, pp. 4–21, 137–47, 261–73, 426–33; xii, pp. 34–9, (1935) Highland Homespun, (1937) Harvest of the Moor, (1938) Love of the Destroyer, (1938) My Kingdom for a Horse, (1941) Driftwood and Tangle. LEITH, Anne, fl.

1740s. Helped Jacobite prisoners after Culloden. Anne Leith, a young widow from Aberdeen­ shire, was in Inverness when news broke of the Jacobite defeat at Culloden on 16 April 1746. She gathered together food and medical supplies and went out to the battlefield that same afternoon. Ignoring the risks to themselves from the victorious Redcoats, she and two female companions gave what help they could to the wounded. Until the Jacobite prisoners were shipped out of Inverness three months later, Anne Leith spent her days visiting them. She took bread and bandages and demanded that they be treated humanely, as prisoners of war. Many were in such distress that she wrote: ‘Nothing then but scenes of horror every moment.’ Arrested on four separate occasions, she talked her way out of it each time. She continued to help the prisoners, spending most of her money in the process. MEC

• Craig, M. (1997) Damn’ Rebel Bitches: the women of the 45; Forbes, Bishop R. (1895) The Lyon in Mourning; Tayler, A. and H. (1928) Jacobites of Aberdeenshire in the Forty-Five.

born De Kalb, Illinois, USA, 3 March 1944, died Edinburgh 26 Dec. 1999. Historian and cookery writer. Daughter of Lisa Leneman, and David Leneman, artist. Leah Leneman grew up in Los Angeles, the daughter of Jewish émigré parents. Educated in a private English/Hebrew school, then state school, she embarked on an acting career in the early 1960s, first in New York, then in Islington, London (Tower Theatre). She was influenced by the Vedanta movement of Hinduism to become a vegetarian and later a vegan and, taking up cookery writing, was a regular contributor to and editorial assistant for The Vegetarian. She published seven popular cookbooks, including The Amazing Avocado (1984), many of the recipes taste-tested by Graham Sutton, her partner from 1976. Leah Leneman was also one of the pioneers of women’s history in Scotland. A temporary job at

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Aviemore and adult education classes developed her interest in Scotland’s history, and after taking A-levels, she enrolled as a mature student at the University of Edinburgh in 1975. Her PhD was published as Living in Atholl 1685–1785 (1986). A prolific researcher and writer, she thereafter earned her living through research grants and publications (apart from a few spells at the NRS). Writing in an accessible style, she introduced to a wide audience many aspects of Scottish social history from the 17th to the 19th centuries. Collaboration with *Rosalind Mitchison on an innovative study of illegitimacy, Sexuality and Social Control 1660–1780 (1989), led to further work on Scottish women’s history, including books on women’s suffrage, the *Scottish Women’s Hospitals, *Elsie Inglis, marriage and divorce. Facing breast cancer from 1991 with courage, she continued writing, including her posthumously published life-story. ee • Leneman, L., Works as above, and (2000) ‘A personal history’, Wom. Hist. Rev., 9, (2003) Promises, Promises. See also Bibl. below. Nenadic, S. (2000) ‘Leah Leneman (1944–99): an appreciation’, Wom. Hist. Rev., 9; The Scotsman, 12 Dec. 1999 (obit.) (Bibl.). Private information.

fl. 1839–1841. Chartist leader. Agnes Lennox was the chairwoman of the Gorbals Female Universal Suffrage Association of Glasgow, founded in 1839, which brought women into the Chartist movement, and provided soirées and temperance teas. She was known for singing the Chartist song of liberty. The group also served the cause of self-improvement; its members wrote useful essays and instructed each other ‘in political and scientific subjects’. The women primarily defined themselves as the wives, daughters and mothers of Chartist men, and the men who addressed them denounced the necessity for women to work in factories. Agnes Lennox proclaimed, ‘It is a bitter slavery many have to endure in these factories – there “many a flower is born to blush unseen/And waste its fragrance midst the factory steam”’(True Scotsman 1840). However, she asserted women’s right to participate in politics and male Chartists supported her. The Glasgow Constitutional insulted her as ‘Miss Impudence’ and a ‘Brazen-faced Jade’ (1839), but she vigorously defended herself as a ‘young virtuous female’ in a letter to the newspapers. The male Operative Masons Universal Suffrage Society also wrote to

LENNOX, Agnes,

applaud Agnes Lennox against these insinuations. Her leadership became known as far as away as Birmingham, where ‘her example was referred to when young ladies blushed and hesitated to take the chair at meetings’ (Scots Times 1841). Another young woman (and daughter of a Chartist), known only as Miss Muir (fl. 1840s), was the leader of the Calton and Mile End Female Chartist Association in Glasgow. Initially apologetic about speaking in public, Miss Muir too asserted herself: ‘I have ventured to step over that false delicacy in which the conventional prejudices of society have enshrouded women’ (Scots Times 1840). She asked, ‘is it indelicate for a starving woman to say she was in want?’ In fact, she argued, it was immoral for a mother to fail to protest ‘while her children are crying for bread’ (ibid.). akc • Lennox, A. Glasgow Constitutional, 20 Nov. 1839; Scottish Patriot, 3 August, 14 Sept., 30 Nov. 1839; Scots Times, 17 Jan., 29 Feb., 6 May, 30 Sept. 1840, 4 March 1841; True Scotsman, 7 Dec. 1839, 3 Oct. 1840. Muir, Miss, Scots Times, 17 June, 18 Nov., 30 Dec. 1840. Clark, A. (1995) The Struggle for the Breeches: gender and the making of the British working class. LESLIE, Beatrix (or Beatrice),

born c. 1577, died 3 Sept. 1661. Midwife. Executed for witchcraft. Little is known about Beatrix Leslie’s life, apart from her marriage to William Moffat, until she was accused in 1661, at the age of 84, of causing the collapse of a coal pit through witchcraft. She described how, as a midwife, she used salt and a knife in protective rituals during childbirth and, from her advanced age, it would seem that her skills had proved useful for years. However, she does appear to have been argumentative. Several disputes with her neighbours were reported. It was said she uttered curses, as a result of which several women claimed to have suffered harm and loss. As the accusations brought against her included malefice (evil harm) and demonic witchcraft, the witch-pricker, John Kincaid, was involved and Beatrix Leslie was subjected to ordeals such as pricking to prove the existence of the devil’s mark, and ‘bierricht’. During the latter ritual, suspects were brought near to, or touched, the body of their supposed victim and, if guilty, the corpse would bleed. Beatrix Leslie confessed to several aspects of demonic witchcraft, including meeting the Devil in the shape of a brown dog and as a young lad. She said she was given a new name, ‘Bold Leslie’, and agreed to be his servant, but claimed she had not renounced her baptism. She was investigated

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and tried with five other women. Found guilty, she was ordered to be executed by being strangled and burnt on 3 September 1661. Although Beatrix Leslie’s midwifery skills were significant enough to be mentioned in her trial, they had little to do with her accusations of witchcraft. These were more likely the result of her quarrelsome attitude, followed by harm. Two other factors were important in her trial. One was her confession, albeit as a result of ordeal, to demonic pact, and the other was being part of a group of accused people. 1661 was a year of high intensity for prosecutions in the Lothians, and she may have been unlucky to have been tried at this time. jhmm • NRS: JC2/10, ff 10v–17v; JC2/11, Books of Adjournal; JC26/27/9 items 4, 5, 9, 13, 19, 20, High Court Process Notes.

born c. 1508, died Elcho 7 Sept. 1570. Prioress of Elcho. Possibly daughter of Mr Walter Leslie, parson of Menmuir, or a Leslie of Rothes. Sister to Master Robert Leslie, advocate, Euphemia Leslie was involved in a famous legal case. On 6 November 1526, she sought papal dispensation because of her illegitimate birth as the daughter of an unmarried woman and a priest, and her age, since she was only 18, in order to become Prioress of Elcho. It was granted, but litigation ensued for the office with her predecessor, Elizabeth Swinton. In 1527, with the help of her brother and an army of 80 men, she invaded the priory, causing much damage. Elizabeth Swinton, confined to her chamber and fearing for her life, was compelled to resign. Litigation continued, however, and Euphemia Leslie did not receive office until 14 January 1529. As Prioress, she granted tacks (land leases) to her brother and others. A document addressed to John Swinton was written in her own hand and includes her signature and those of ten nuns. She managed the convent’s affairs, including dealing with an English invasion in 1547 and subsequent financial difficulties, until her death. She was the only Scottish prioress to leave a will and testament; it includes a list of pensions owed to the remaining nuns. kp LESLIE, Euphemia,

• NRS: GD12, Swinton Charters; Commissary Court of Edinburgh, Register of Testaments; Perth Museum and Art Gallery: PMAG 1983–4, Elcho Nunnery Archive. HRHS; Perkins, K. (2001) ‘Death, removal and resignation: . . . office of Prioress in late medieval Scotland’, in Y. Brown and R. Ferguson (eds) Twisted Sisters (Bibl.).

LESLIE MACKENZIE, Lady Carruthers (1859–1945)

see MACKENZIE, Helen

LEVISON, Rev. Dr Mary Irene, n. Lusk, born Oxford, 8 Jan. 1923, died Edinburgh, 12 Sept. 2011. Church of Scotland minister. Daughter of Mary Theodora Colville, and Rev. David Colville Lusk, minister. The fourth of five children, including *Janet Lusk, Mary Lusk grew up in Oxford, where her father was a university chaplain. She attended St Leonards School, St Andrews, and took a first in Philosophy, Politics and Economics at Oxford University. Desiring to serve in the Church of Scotland, she was a prizewinning theology student at Edinburgh, Heidelberg and Basel, and was set apart as a Deaconess (DCS) in 1954. That year she represented the Church at the World Council of Churches Fourth Assembly in Evanston, USA. Appointed DCS to St Michael’s Church, Musselburgh, in 1957 she became the first woman in the Church of Scotland to be licensed to preach. She was a tutor for diaconate training at St Colm’s College, 1958–60, and from 1960 assistant to University of Edinburgh chaplain. In that capacity she petitioned the General Assembly in 1963 to test her call to the ministry of word and sacrament. The issue of women’s ordination had been raised periodically since 1921, but her petition broke the impasse, leading to the 1968 deliverance, opening ordained ministry to women on the same terms as men. She married Rev. Fred Levison in 1965 and was not ordained until 1978. As assistant minister at St Andrew’s and St George’s Church, Edinburgh, she had responsibility for ministry to the retail community. She was the first woman appointed as chaplain to the Queen (1991) and in 1993 was proposed but not elected as Moderator. In 1994 she received an honorary Doctor of Divinity degree from the University of Edinburgh. She was a forthright and always loyal pioneer in her ‘wrestling with the church’. LO

• NLS: Acc.13002, Rev. Mary Levison papers. Levison, M. (1992) Wrestling with the Church. Orr Macdonald, L. (ed.) (1999) In Good Company: women in the ministry; The Scotsman, 15 Sept. 2011 (obit.). LEWIS, Agnes Smith, n. Smith, GIBSON, Margaret Dunlop, n. Smith; born Irvine 1843, died Cambridge

29 March 1926 and 11 Jan. 1920 respectively. Travellers, scholars of Semitic languages. Twin daughters of Margaret Dunlop, and John Smith, solicitor of Irvine. 244

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Their mother’s early death made for an isolated childhood that laid the foundation of Agnes and Margaret Smith’s intense attachment to each other throughout their life. When they were 23, their father’s sudden death gave them independence and a very considerable fortune. They ignored prevailing social restrictions and in 1868 set off, unchaperoned, on the first of their journeys to the Near East. On their return they started to study Greek, the first of many languages they were to master. Agnes Smith also produced three novels of minor literary value. Margaret Smith married James Y. Gibson (1826–86, minister and translator) and Agnes Smith married Samuel Lewis (1836–91, classicist, librarian of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge), but each was widowed after a few years. They spent the rest of their lives together in ‘Castlebrae’, the house built by Agnes Lewis’s husband in Cambridge. Here they became part of a wide circle of academics and developed their own academic interests, acquiring proficiency in Syriac, Arabic and Hebrew. In 1890, they set off for St Catherine’s Monastery at Mt Sinai, a journey of 10 days by camel from Cairo. A letter from the leading scholar James Rendel Harris admitted them to the monastery’s famous library, where they made a most outstanding discovery, a version of the Old Syriac Gospels, dated to the 5th century ad. Further expeditions to the Middle East followed and even greater discoveries. Leaves of a Hebrew manuscript purchased in Cairo proved to be the Hebrew version of the Jewish text of Ecclesiasticus in the Septuagint, until then only known in Greek and Syriac translations. Their pioneering research and publications in what was a male-dominated field of academic pursuit gave the sisters a place in scholarship that continues until today. For their achievements, they received doctorates from Halle, St Andrews, Heidelberg and Trinity College, Dublin, though not from Cambridge, despite having been active members of the academic community there. They encouraged young scholars and endowed Westminster College, which opened in 1899. Their portraits, showing them robed in doctoral gowns, still hang in the hall of the College. m v h • Gibson, M. D. (Selected) (1893) How the Codex was Found, (1894) A Catalogue of the Arabic manuscripts in the Convent of St Catharine on Mount Sinai. Lewis, A. S. (Selected) (1870) Eastern Pilgrims, (1879) Effie Maxwell, 3 vols, (1884) Glimpses of Greek Life and Scenery, (1894) A Translation of The Four Gospels from the Syriac of the

Sinaitic Palimpsest, (1913) Light on the Four Gospels from the Sinai Palimpsest, (1894) A Catalogue of the Syriac manuscripts in the Convent of St Catharine on Mount Sinai. ODNB (2004) (Lewis, Agnes; Gibson, Margaret); Price, A. W. (1985) The Ladies of Castlebrae (Bibl.); Soskice, J. (2009) The Sisters of Sinai: how two lady adventurers discovered the hidden gospels.

born Edinburgh 10 July 1889, died Edinburgh 4 March 1970. Concert organiser. Daughter of Agnes Shillinglaw, and Louis Liebenthal, German grain merchant, Leith. Tertia Liebenthal, born into a musical household and educated at St George’s School, spent a year in Berlin in 1906, visiting relatives and attending finishing school. Inspired by Donald Tovey, she played the violin in the Reid Orchestra for several seasons, during the ‘golden age of Edinburgh music-making’ (ODNB 2004, entry on Tovey). She became bestknown in the musical world as a concert organiser, after writing to The Scotsman in 1941 suggesting that a concert series might comfort people in the dark days of the war. The suggestion was taken up, and the Trustees of the National Gallery provided the space on Wednesday lunchtimes. At first a committee was formed, but soon Tertia Liebenthal, a formidable talent scout, ran the concerts as ‘an inspired autocracy’ (Scotsman, 1965), contacting both wellknown and up-and-coming musicians: Kathleen Ferrier gave a recital in Edinburgh in 1943, at the outset of her career; other national figures included Peter Pears, Solomon, John Ogdon, and Scottish performers such as *Joan Dickson. Conrad Wilson remarked that it was enjoyable to say of a star musician in London that he or she had been spotted ‘years ago’ by Miss Liebenthal (Scotsman, 1963). Hers was perhaps the only concert series started by artillery – the Edinburgh one o’clock gun. The concerts continued after the war, the 600th being performed in 1965, without one having been cancelled. Tertia Liebenthal died in the RSA building in 1970. At Festival time, she kept open house in her lifelong home in Regent Terrace for musicians from all over the world. A bronze bust of her (after Diona Murray) is in the SNPG. sr

LIEBENTHAL, Dora Tertia,

• NLS: MSS 21564-71, Liebenthal family papers. Glasgow Herald, 19 April 1966; The Scotsman, 28 Oct. 1963 and 11 Dec. 1965; ODNB (2004) (see Tovey, Donald); Wilson, C. (2014) ‘Remembering Tertia’, conradkmwilson. blogspot.co.uk. LILIAS of Ancrum,

heroine. 245

fl. allegedly 1545. Border folk

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The only known reference to Lilias is on a memorial stone near the site of the Battle of Ancrum Moor (February, 1545). The inscription reads: Fair maiden Lilliard lies under this stane; Little was her stature, but great was her fame; Upon the English loons she laid mony thumps, And when her legs were cuttid aff, she fought on her stumps.

As no other sources mention a female warrior, Lilias is probably fictitious. The stone, first mentioned in the mid-19th century, may be linked to renewed interest in Border folklore after Walter Scott published his Border Ballads. A local myth recalled that while Lilias watched the battle, she saw her lover killed. In anguish she took a sword and fought bravely before dying herself. The Scots won this Border battle, a rare victory amidst the terrible ‘Rough Wooing’ of Scotland by Henry VIII. mmm • Cowan, E. J. (2000) ‘Sex and violence in the Scottish ballads’, in E. J. Cowan (ed.) The Ballad in Scottish History, p. 109; Lamont-Brown, R. (1996) Scottish Folklore, pp. 53–4; New Statistical Account of Scotland (1845), iii, 244.

fl. 1588. Cook, possibly poet. In 1586, Christian Lindsay, a member of the royal household, married William Murray, Master of the Carriage to James VI. In August 1588, she was awarded a lifetime annual pension of four measures of barley for providing oatcakes and bread for the king. She has more recently excited critical attention as possibly having been an early Scottish female poet. A sonnet bearing the name ‘Christiane Lyndesay to Robert Hudsone’ is appended, in the Ker MS, to Alexander Montgomerie’s sonnet sequence ‘To Robert Hudsone’. The name Christian Lindsay is also associated with poetry in James VI’s poem, ‘The Admonition of the Master Poet’, written in or before 1584. These references do not prove that Christian Lindsay was a well-known female court poet – it may be that Montgomerie is ventriloquising and using ‘Christian Lindsay’ as a nom de plume – but the possibility that she may have been recognised as a poet is intriguing. It is also not certain that the Christian Lindsay who wrote the poems is the same Christian Lindsay who baked for the king although, as she was at court during the 1580s, she seems to be the most likely candidate. pbg LINDSAY, Christian,

• Univ. of Edinburgh Library, De.3.70, f.68v ‘Christen Lyndesay to Robert Hudsone’. Juhala, A. (2000) ‘The household and court of King James VI of Scotland, 1567–1603’, PhD, Univ. of Edinburgh,

p. 175; Heijnsbergen, T. van (2000) ‘Performing the female: Christian Lindsay and male adaptations of female voices’, in N. Royan and T. van Heijnsbergen (eds) Public Literature and Performance in the Sixteenth Century, p. 88, n. 58. Private information: Amy Juhala. LINKLATER, Marjorie, n. MacIntyre, born Edinburgh 19 March 1909, died Kirkwall, Orkney, 29 June 1997. Campaigner for arts, heritage, environment. Daughter of Ida van der Gucht, and Ian MacIntyre, politician and lawyer. One of six children, Marjorie MacIntyre was educated at St George’s School, Edinburgh, and Downe House, Berkshire. She studied at RADA in London, and acted in small parts in the West End. Her beauty is evident in a portrait by Stanley Cursiter (Linklater Rooms, University of Aberdeen). In 1933 she met and married the novelist Eric Linklater (1899–1974) in Edinburgh. They lived together in Orkney, then in 1947 moved to Easter Ross, where they brought up their family of four children. Active in local drama groups, and member of the SAC (1957–63), Marjorie Linklater became involved in politics as an independent county councillor. Following her husband’s death in 1974, she moved back to Orkney and for the next 25 years was an active ‘green’ campaigner against plans to mine uranium and the dumping of nuclear waste in Orkney waters. She became agent for the veteran SNP MEP, Winnie Ewing, who said of her: ‘If I could have a wand and be in power in Scotland, I would have urged that she be an ambassadress’. She chaired the Orkney Heritage Society, helped restore the 8th-century chapel of St Boniface on Papa Westray and was founder-chair of the Pier Arts Centre (see Gardiner, Margaret) and honorary vicepresident of the St Magnus Festival. She initiated the Johnsmas Foy, a celebration of writing, and the Orkney Folk Festival. She was able to attend the last concert of the 1977 St Magnus Festival shortly before her death. Her memory is honoured in Orkney by the annual Marjorie Linklater Writing Award. mdl

• NLS: Linklater papers. Family papers, diaries and photographs held by Alison, Kristin and Magnus Linklater. ODNB (2004) (see Linklater, Eric); Parnell, M. (1984) Eric Linklater ; Obits in Glasgow Herald, The Orcadian, The Scotsman, The Times, July 1997. LINLITHGOW, Helen, Countess of see HAY, Helen, Countess of Linlithgow (b. before 1570, d. 1627)

n. Murray, born Newhaven, Edinburgh, 11 August 1896, died Newhaven 15 April

LISTON, Esther Wilson,

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1989. Fishwife. Daughter of Esther Murray, fishwife, and Henry Murray, fisherman. One of three children, Esther Murray was educated at Newhaven and Couper Street schools, leaving at 15 when she was apprenticed to a seamstress, then to a butcher. In 1923 she married George Liston, fisherman. He had served in the First World War, returning with damaged health, and died in 1932, leaving her to raise two sons, aged seven and five, on an 18 shilling weekly pension. Necessity sent her to the creel, something she had learned from her mother. She spoke of the weight of the creel – a basket filled with fish carried on the back, suspended from a linen strap around the forehead: ‘At first I felt as if my neck was breaking. It’s an art you know. I used to practise with a two-stone box of kippers, then I got used to it’ (Newhaven 1998, p. 37). Three mornings a week, she would get up at 6am to go down to the crowded harbour where fishwives bought crates of fish at auction, divided them, then went into Edinburgh to sell them, each on her own territory. Esther Liston also sang with the Fisherwomen’s Choir, started in Newhaven in 1927, which performed in Scotland, London and in Norway. Through hearing her sing, the sculptor Julian Allen asked her to sit for a bronze bust (presented to the Newhaven Heritage Museum in 1995). Her life represents that of many women in fishing communities, some of whose names, photographs, traditional costumes and songs are displayed in the museum (see also Flucker, Barbara). BBC Scotland described her as the ‘last working fishwife that went out with the creel’ (1953) well before her retirement in her late seventies. The last surviving Newhaven fishwife is thought to have been Frances Milligan, n. Clements (1908–2000), who ‘left school on the Friday when I was fourteen year old and on the Tuesday I had the creel on my back’. awp • Interview by author with George Liston, July 2002; Newhaven Heritage Museum, staff and volunteers; PSMOHA: Esther Liston T267/94 and N1, Frances Milligan T271/94. City of Edinburgh Council (1998) Newhaven: Personal Recollections & Photographs. LISTON, Henrietta, Lady, n. Marchant, born Antigua 1751, died Edinburgh 1828. Diarist and travel writer. Daughter of Sarah Marchant, and Nathaniel Marchant, merchant and planter. Born into a large Scottish family in the West Indies, Henrietta Marchant had at least seven brothers, three of whom attended the University of

Glasgow. In February 1796, she too was in Glasgow, to marry the Scottish diplomat Sir Robert Liston (1742–1836). They went to the United States, where her husband was ambassador, and from where she sent a series of lively letters home, then travelled in the Caribbean from December 1800 to April 1801. Her detailed journal recounts her impressions of Antigua, Dominica, Martinique, St Vincent, Montserrat and St Kitts, offering insight into the social lives of the white élite on the islands, but largely silent on the condition of the enslaved. In 1804, the Listons retired to Millburn Tower near Edinburgh, where Henrietta Liston, who collected botanical specimens, created an American garden. A late posting to Constantinople followed, and the Listons finally retired in 1821 to Millburn Tower, where Lady Liston died in 1828. djh • NLS: MS 5704, Liston Papers; Liston, H. ‘The North American journeys of a diplomat’s wife’, website, NLS. Innes, W. A. (1913) The Matriculation Albums of the University of Glasgow; ODNB (2004) (Liston, Sir Robert); Perkins, B. (1954) ‘A diplomat’s wife in Philadelphia: letters of Henrietta Liston 1796–1800’, in William and Mary Quarterly, 11, pp. 592–632. LITTLE, Janet (‘the Scotch Milkmaid’), m. Richmond, born Nether Bogside, Ecclefechan, baptised 13 August 1759, died Loudoun Castle 15 March 1813. Poet. Daughter of George Little. Not much is known about Janet Little’s upbringing. She worked in domestic service for the Rev. Johnstone, then as head dairymaid at Loudoun Castle in Ayrshire, where her employer was Susan Henrie, daughter of Robert Burns’s patron, *Frances Dunlop. After the Henries’ lease expired, she continued to run the Loudoun dairy. In 1792, Janet Little married labourer John Richmond (c. 1741–1819) and became stepmother to his five children. In the same year she published her Poetical Works, which sold about 800 copies by subscription. Patronised by Frances Dunlop, she experimented in various poetic styles, from formal English (‘To a Lady, A Patroness of the Muse on her Recovery from Sickness’) to satires on pastoral life (‘The Fickle Pair’). She was accomplished in the Scots language, as in the Ramsayan ‘On Seeing Mr – baking cakes’ or the Fergussoninfluenced ‘On Hallowe’en’. She greatly admired Burns, and commemorated an apparent meeting with the ‘bard’, ‘On a Visit to Mr Burns’. Her originality (and self-consciousness) is evident in ‘Given to a Lady who asked me to write a poem’. There, the ‘rustic country quean’ is told to mind

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her dairy rather than to write, ‘Does she, poor silly thing, pretend/The manners of our age to mend?’ Faced with such hostility, ‘My hand still trembles while I write’. More of her poems were published after her death (Paterson 1840). Janet Little was a fine poet, whose literary reputation deserves to be rescued. vb • Little, J. (1792) The Poetical Works of Janet Little, The Scotch Milkmaid. Bold, V. (1993) ‘Janet Little, “The Scotch Milkmaid” and “Peasant Poetry”’, Scot. Lit. Jour., 20:2; Ferguson, M. (1995), ‘Janet Little and Robert Burns: the politics of the heart’, in T. M. Kelley and P. R. Feldman (eds) Romantic Women Writers: voices and countervoices; Landry, D. (1990) The Muses of Resistance; ODNB (2004); Paterson, J. (1840) The Contemporaries of Burns. LIVINGSTON, Jean (aka Lady Warriston), born Stirlingshire 1579, died Edinburgh 5 July 1600. Murderer. Daughter of Margaret Colville, and John Livingston, younger of Dunipace. Jean Livingston married John Kincaid of Warriston in 1594. The marriage was unhappy, possibly involving physical abuse. In 1600, Jean and her nurse, Janet Murdo, decided on John’s murder, and approached Robert Weir, a servant of Jean’s father. On 1 July 1600, after John Kincaid had retired, Weir, who had been hidden in the house, strangled him. The murderer escaped, but the noise caused alarm; the next morning officers arrested Jean Livingston, Janet Murdo and two servants, Barbara Barton and Agnes Johnston. Jean and Janet were found guilty on 3 July and sentenced to be strangled and burnt on 5 July. The servants, charged as accomplices, were acquitted (although a 17th-century history erroneously reports that one was burnt). Jean Livingston’s father, worried about his reputation, made no attempt to save her, although the family urged that the execution be changed to an early-morning beheading, and for Janet Murdo to be burnt at the same time on Castle Hill to distract attention. Before the trial, a minister visited Jean Livingston and urged her to repent. He recorded her conversion and her execution at the Girth Cross in Canongate. The ballad ‘The Laird of Waristoun’ commemorates these events. ee

• Edinburgh City Archives: SL150/1/7 Regality Court Book of Canongate. Brown, K. M. (1992) ‘The laird, his daughter, her husband and the minister’, in R. Mason and N. MacDougall (eds) People and Power in Scotland; ODNB (2004); Sharpe, C. K.

(ed.) (1827) Memorial of the confession of Jean Livingston, Lady Wariston . . . July 1600.

MBE, born Wishaw, Lanarkshire, 19 April 1902, died Edinburgh 19 Jan. 1985. Writer, social historian. Daughter of Helen Watt, and Alexander Lochhead, draper and ­clothier. Marion Lochhead graduated in English Literature and Latin at the University of Glasgow (MA 1923). Becoming a teacher, she turned to poetry and other writing in the 1920s. She said, ‘I began as a poet, with an increasing interest in biography and social and domestic history’ (DLB Gale 1981, p. 289). Her biographical work includes John Gibson Lockhart (1954) and Elizabeth Rigley, Lady Eastlake (1961). Her historical interests led to her important The Scots Household in the Eighteenth Century (1948) and to works on Victorian domestic life and childhood, anticipating current interest in women’s history. She also contributed poems, articles and reviews to The Scotsman and to various journals. Her first collection, Poems, was published in 1928, followed by three further collections. She wrote five novels in the 1930s, including Anne Dalrymple (1934) and Island Destiny (1936). She had no children, but her interest in the imaginative capacities of childhood can be seen in The Renaissance of Wonder in Children’s Literature (1977) published when she was in her mid-70s. A friend described her as having ‘the rare ability to meet all ages at their own level, moving effortlessly from the childlike belief in the Other Country with its innate innocence to the sharpness of her undoubted intellect’ (Scotsman 1985). She also edited Scottish Tales of Magic and Mystery (1978), Scottish Love Stories (1979) and Magic and Witchcraft of the Borders (1984). Marion Lochhead was a devout member of the Scottish Episcopal Church and edited its Diocesan Gazette for many years. Her obituary in The Scotsman calls her ‘a most exceptional friend’ and she was close to other women writers including *Helen Cruickshank. She was a founder member of Scottish PEN, a fellow of the RSL (1955) and an MBE (1963). mpm LOCHHEAD, Marion Cleland,

• Edinburgh University Library: Coll-809 Marion Lochhead Papers; NLS: MSS 26190–3, Marion Lochhead Archive, Acc. 7783, 9507, 11588; Motherwell Heritage Centre (Local Studies division). Lochhead, M., Works as above, and see HSWW (Bibl.). Cruickshank, H. (1976) Octobiography; DLB Gale (1981); HSWW (Bibl.); The Scotsman, 21 Jan. 1985 (obit.); The Times, 26 Jan. 1985 (obits).

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LOG LOFTUS, Marie, m. Brown, born Glasgow, 24 Nov. 1857, died Hendon, London, 7 Dec. 1940. Music hall comedian and pantomime principal boy. LOFTUS, Marie Cecilia Brown (Cissie), m. McCarthy born Glasgow 22 Oct. 1876, died New York, USA, 12 July 1943. Mimic and actor. Daughter of Marie Loftus, and Ben Brown, variety artist. Marie Loftus was born in Glasgow of Irish parents, reputedly in Stockwell Street, where she made her first stage appearance, dancing at Mrs Baylis’s Scotia Music Hall, and earning 3s 6d a week. She made her début at Brown’s Royal Music Hall, Glasgow, in March 1874, and her first London appearances at the Oxford Music Hall in April 1877. As ‘The Hibernian Hebe’ and ‘The Sarah Bernhardt of the Music Halls’, she became one of the British music hall’s highest-paid female stars, reputedly commanding £100 a week by the late 1890s, and touring to the United States and South Africa. She was also a leading pantomime principal boy, appearing at the Theatre Royal Glasgow as Robinson Crusoe in 1889 and 1900 and Sinbad the Sailor in 1895, and in Augustus Harris’s 1892 Drury Lane production of Little Bo-Peep. A full-figured, strikingly handsome woman, Marie Loftus was a ‘serio-comedienne’, a nowforgotten genre of performer who sang both comic and sentimental songs. She was enormously popular in Glasgow. After one performance at the Britannia in Trongate in 1894, more than 1,000 people waited for her outside the hall and six extra constables had to be called to disperse the crowd. A gifted burlesque artist, her material ranged from coquettishly risqué songs such as ‘Sister Mary wants to know’ to sentimental ballads such as ‘A Thing you can’t buy with gold’ and ‘To err is human, to forgive divine’. Recalling her, the author J. J. Bell wrote: ‘Glasgow never had a greater favourite . . . In the spotlight, singing “That is Love”, she looked – to me, at 18 – beautiful. To this day you can still hear people humming the tune of that song of more than forty years ago – her memorial’ (Bell 1932, p. 134). Her daughter Cecilia was a highly talented mimic and actor. After a convent education, she appeared at the Oxford in July 1893 at the age of 16, where her imitations of stage and music hall personalities caused a sensation. After eloping with her first husband, the novelist Justin Huntly McCarthy, she appeared in New York from 1894 in both legitimate drama and vaudeville, and ­subsequently appeared in London with Irving

in Faust at the Lyceum, in the title role in Peter Pan and in the first Royal Music Hall Command Performance in 1912. She also acted in about a dozen films. pm • Bell, J. J. (1932) I Remember ; Busby, R. (1976) British Music Hall: an illustrated who’s who from 1850 to the present day; Glasgow Evening News, 13 Nov. 1894; ‘Marie Loftus at Home’, Glasgow Harlequin, 17 Dec. 1895 pp. 8–9; Glasgow Herald, 14 Dec. 1940 (obit.); Glenn, S. A. (2009) Female Spectacle: the theatrical roots of modern feminism; Illustrated London News, 15 Sept. 1923; James, E. T. et al. (1971) (eds) Notable American Women, vol. 2 (for Cissie Loftus); Maloney, P. (2003) Scotland and the Music Hall, 1850–1914; Parker J. (ed.) (1916) Who’s Who in the Theatre, [‘Who’s Who in Variety’ supplement] 3rd edn.; ‘Miss Marie Loftus’ The Sketch, 26 Dec. 1894, p. 401.

n. Laird, m1 Log, m2 Hare, born Ireland c. 1788, died probably Australia, date unknown. Wife and associate of William Hare who, with William Burke, supplied murdered bodies to Edinburgh anatomist Robert Knox for financial reward. The former Margaret Laird had worked on the Union Canal as a navvy and overseer with her first husband, James Log. They later settled in Edinburgh, and after his death, ‘Lucky’ Log maintained their lodging-house in the West Port district, with William Hare, also an Irish labourer, whose name she took. She was probably the instigator of their money-making scheme, along with Hare’s friend, another Irishman William Burke, and Helen or Nelly M’Dougal (born Muiravonside, Stirlingshire, c. 1795), Burke’s common-law wife since 1817, and the only Scot among the four. Both women were tough, poor and bent with childbearing and hard labour; their husbands lived well on the proceeds of the bodies sold, sharing little with their wives. Following the first sale to the medical school of a boarder who had died, the four proceeded throughout 1828 to murder lodgers in their establishment who were old, sick or plied with drink. Lucky Log undoubtedly intended to remain in control of the gang, but was edged out by Burke, and sidelined by both men’s cash dealings with Robert Knox. After their arrest, she and Helen M’Dougal, who both cringed and wept in court, faded from trial accounts. (Hare turned king’s evidence and Burke was hanged.) Despite public opprobrium, it seems that the lawyers and jurors in an increasingly polite and bourgeois age were reluctant to recognise evil in female form; yet LOG, Margaret (‘Lucky’)

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both women had been active participants in the ­household criminal enterprise. DAS

Burns were not romantically involved, his esteem for her was high and he dedicated more songs to her than to any other woman. mb

• Barzun, J. (ed.) (1974) Burke and Hare; Edinburgh Evening Courant, Nov. 1828–March 1829; ODNB (2004) (Burke, William, Bibl.); Symonds, D. A. (2006) Notorious Murders, Black Lanterns, and Moveable Goods: the transformation of Edinburgh’s underworld in the early nineteenth century; Trial of William Burke and Helen M’Dougal, Before the High Court of Justiciary, at Edinburgh, December 24, 1828, for the Murder of Margery Campbell, or Docherty (Edinburgh: n.p., 1829); West Port Murders (Edinburgh: Thomas Ireland, Junior, 1829); reprinted Edinburgh: West Port Books, 2001. LOGAN, Ella

• Adams, J. (1893) Burns’s Chloris; Hill, J. C. (1961) The Love Songs and Heroines of Robert Burns; Bell, M. (2001) Tae The Lasses.

see ALLAN, Georgina Armour (1913–69)

m. Whelpdale, born Craigieburn, Moffatt, 1775, died Edinburgh 11 Sept. 1831. Friend and contemporary of Robert Burns. Daughter of Agnes Carson, and William Lorimer, farmer. In autumn 1790, Jean Lorimer’s family rented Kemys Hall, two miles from Ellisland, Nithsdale, where Robert Burns and *Jean Armour farmed. The families became good friends. Jean Lorimer attracted many suitors, one being Andrew Whelpdale from Cumbria, whom she met in 1793 and eloped with to marry at Gretna Green. Within a few weeks he fled Scotland to avoid his creditors, leaving her to return to her father’s house, penniless: although he deserted her, she never divorced him. He died in Langholm, Dumfries, in 1834. In August 1795, the Lorimers gave up Kemys Hall and moved into Dumfries, where the Burns family lived. Jean Lorimer lived with her father until his death on 25 October 1808, then worked as a seamstress and a governess in the north of England before moving to Edinburgh c. 1816. Rumour, and letters written in the 1850s by Thomas Thorburn and James Hogg, suggested that she was a vagrant but those who knew her well denied the accusations. In 1825 she was brought to public attention as a friend of Burns by an Edinburgh newspaper. Following this publicity she was offered the post of housekeeper to a gentleman in Blacket Place. Many people came to visit and talk with the ‘Lassie wi’ the lint-white locks’. A few years later, she developed tuberculosis and moved to a small flat in Middleton’s Entry, Potterrow, supported by her ex-employer until her death. In 1901, to commemorate her memory, the Ninety Burns Club erected a Celtic cross over her grave in Preston Street Cemetery. Although Jean Lorimer and Robert LORIMER, Jean (‘Chloris’),

LOTHIAN, Antonella (Tony), n. Newland, Marchioness of Lothian, OBE, born Rome, 22 May 1922, died Jedburgh, 6 Jan. 2007. Journalist, broadcaster, author and founder of the Women of the Year Lunch. Daughter of Donna Nennella Salazar y Munatones, and Major-General Sir Foster Reuss Newland. Antonella Newland married Peter, 12th Marquis of Lothian, in 1943; they had six children and lived in the Scottish Borders. Tony Lothian, as she was always known, founded the Women of the Year Lunch in 1955 to honour women of achievement from every walk of life. This became the most prestigious gathering of women in Britain. From 1960 to 1974 she was a columnist with the Scottish Daily Express, where she championed the rights of the poor, the less well educated and, most of all, women. She supported the feminist movement but never flinched from voicing her opposition to abortion. Feminism, she believed, should be inclusive of all opinions. Tony Lothian was vice-president of the Royal College of Nursing and patron of the National Council of Women and the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists. As President of the Order of Christian Unity, she founded the Valiant For Truth Award in 1974 for candidates working in the media. In 1992, she was awarded the Templeton Prize for her ‘long-sustained commitment to inter-faith endeavour’. In 1984, Tony Lothian met Valentina Tereshkova, the first woman in space. They became friends and she visited Moscow on several occasions during and after the Cold War, publishing, in 1993, a biographical account of Tereshkova’s life: Valentina, First Woman in Space: conversations with a cosmonaut. She was appointed OBE in 1997 and Dame of the Order of St Gregory the Great in 2002. CNTC

• eODNB. Personal knowledge.

LOUISE, Princess Caroline Alberta, [Myra Fontenoy], Duchess of Argyll, GCVO, GBE, RRC, GCStJ,

VA, CI, born Buckingham Palace 18 March 1848, died Kensington Palace 3 Dec. 1939. Painter and

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sculptor. 4th daughter and 6th child of *Queen Victoria, and Prince Albert. Educated privately by William Leitch, and artists Sarah Dunant, Mary Thornycroft and Edward Courbauld, Princess Louise broke royal precedent, attending public classes from tutors Joseph Boehm and Lawrence Alma-Tadema; Henrietta Montalba was a fellow-student at London’s National Art Training School (1868). She commissioned Edward Godwin to design her studio in Kensington Palace. The princess was thought in the family to have ‘Bohemian tendencies’ and ‘to chase anything in trousers’ (Longford 1991, p. 52). Her terracotta self-portrait (NPG, n.d.), sculptures, sketches, portraits, designs for uniforms, jewellery and lace, as well as her journalism (as ‘Myra Fontenoy’), display her artistic bent. Principal sculptures include a bust of Queen Victoria (1869, Kensington Palace) and a memorial to Canadian soldiers of the Boer War (1905, St Paul’s Cathedral). In 1871 she married John Douglas Sutherland Campbell, Marquis of Lorne (1845–1914), 9th Duke of Argyll, later Governor-General of Canada. As wife of a Scottish Marquis, and later Duchess of Argyll (1900–14), she acquitted her duties to his Scottish estates. Marriage to John Campbell was sometimes difficult; they had no children. Some have suggested that he was homosexual and that interest in the arts kept them together. Rumours of an illegitimate son in 1886–7 with Walter Stirling, her brother’s tutor (Hawkesley 2013), are hard to verify. On the Duke’s death in 1914, however, she suffered a nervous breakdown. Having redesigned uniforms for the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders (1892), Princess Louise became their colonel-in-chief (1919). She maintained a home at Roseneath (Rosneath), Dunbartonshire, visiting regularly. In public life, she was first president of the NUHEW (1872), patroness of the LWS, president of the National Trust and over twenty hospital trusts, and during the First World War carried out many good works. As an unconventional member of the royal family, she attracted both admiration and censure. RA • Duff, D. (1940, 1971) The Life Story of HRH Princess Louise, Duchess of Argyll; Hawkesley, L. (2013) The Mystery of Princess Louise, Queen Victoria’s Rebellious Daughter; Longford, E. (1964) Victoria RI, (1991) Darling Loosy; MSW; ODNB (2004); Stamp, R. (1988) Royal Rebels; Tuttle, C. (1978) Royalty in Canada; Wake, J. (1988) Princess Louise.

LOVI, Isabell, fl. 1805–27. Inventor and ­businesswoman. Isabell Lovi, widow of Angelo Lovi, glassblower, took over and developed her late husband’s business in Edinburgh from 1805 to 1827. Angelo Lovi (born Milan c. 1756) had arrived in Britain via Rotterdam in May 1772. By July 1798, he was living at 16 Niddry Street. He figures in the Edinburgh street directory in 1804, the year he died, as a ‘glass-blower’ at 82 South Bridge, and is known to have made barometers and sets of specific gravity beads. Nothing is known of Isabell Lovi’s family circumstances – not even whether she was a Scot herself. In 1805, however, she took out a patent with an advocate, J. R. Irving, for an ‘Apparatus for determining the specific gravity of fluid bodies’, involving developments to the hydrostatic bubbles invented by Alexander Wilson in the mid-1750s. These beads, which were to be used for precise measurements in industries as diverse as bleaching and distilling, came in sets accompanied by a short instruction booklet (Lovi 1805). In 1813, perhaps in an effort to market the device more widely, she produced another set of ‘Directions’, and a Committee of the Highland Society later approved its use in ascertaining the richness of milk. She made her final appearance in the street directories in 1827. Of the four known sets of ‘Mrs Lovi’s beads’, one is in the Castle Museum, York; one in the Science Museum, London (Inv. 1948–23), and one in a private collection; the other is in the Royal Museum of Scotland. am-l

• British patent 2826, 9 March 1805; Edinburgh City Archives: ‘Register of Aliens 1798 [–1803]’, f.22; RMS, inv. T.1962.115 (beads). Lovi, I. (1805) A Short Introduction to the Use of the Patent Aerometrical Beads, (1813) Directions for using the Patent Aerometric Beads. Bryden, D. J. (2014) ‘Philosophical or hydrostatical bubbles, balls or beads: a short history of specific gravity beads’, Bulletin of the Scientific Instrument Society, 121, pp. 16–22; Clarke, T. N. et al. (1989) Brass & Glass: scientific instrument-making workshops in Scotland; Morrison-Low, A. D. (1991) ‘Women in the nineteenth-century scientific instrument trade’, in M. Benjamin (ed.) Science and Sensibility: gender and scientific enquiry 1780–1945; (1817) Trans. Highland Soc., 5, pp. 181–6.

[formerly Elizabeth], m. MacDonald, ARSA, DLitt., born Gourock, 28 Dec. 1924, died Glasgow 2 Dec. 2007. Painter. Daughter of Elizabeth Paterson Leith, clerk, and John Low, engineer. LOW, Bet,

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Bet Low studied at Greenock Academy, at GSA during the Second World War, at Hospitalfield with James Cowie, and at Jordanhill. A co-founder of the Clyde Group, a leftwing artistic movement, she was also a co-founder of the New Charing Cross Gallery in Glasgow (1963–8, which later became the Compass Gallery, 1969). During her project work at the Unity Theatre, she designed the sets for *Ena Lamont Stewart’s Men Must Weep (1947), and met and married artist and set designer Tom MacDonald; they had two children. Bet Low’s approach to painting was inflected by Polish painters Herman and Adler who worked in Glasgow during the war, and by the spirited philosophies of J. D. Fergusson. In her early figurative drawings of the 1940s there is the clear influence of German Expressionism. Portraying bleak urban life in post-war Glasgow settings, she drew pen and ink portraits of children, refugees and working characters. Her love of Orkney and the Western Isles was the inspiration for many of her more poetic oils, watercolours and fine graphite drawings, behind which lay layers of emotion and meaning. Her work became more ruminative and abstract, tranquil watercolours depicting the fluid movements of water. In her fine detailed graphite drawings, she achieved remarkable effects of light. Latterly she combined still life with her seascapes, creating a surreal-like quality. Singular in style, there is always in her work a strong sense of subjective involvement of the artist herself. She exhibited widely, becoming one of Scotland’s most active and respected artists, and founded the Bet Low Trust (1994) to fund scholarships. JCG • Glasgow University Library: MS Gen 1764, Papers of Bet Low. http://special.lib.gla.ac.uk/manuscripts/search/detail_c. cfm?ID=1422 MSW; The Scotsman, 19 Dec. 2007, The Herald, 16 Dec. 2007 (obits). LOW, Helen Nora Wilson [Lorna Moon], m. Hebditch, born Strichen, Buchan, 16 June 1886,

died Albuquerque, New Mexico, 1 May 1930. Novelist and Hollywood screen-writer. Daughter of Margaret Benzies, and Charles Low, plasterer and hotel landlord. Nora Low received an elementary education at the local Episcopal school but was also influenced by her father, an atheist and socialist. A voracious reader, she constructed her own romance when in 1907 she secretly married a commercial traveller from Yorkshire, William Hebditch (1878–1960),

who had stayed at her parents’ Temperance Hotel. After emigrating with him to Alberta, Canada, she left him for another Yorkshireman, Walter Moon (1890–1971), moving first to Winnipeg then to Minneapolis where she worked as a journalist. She had a child with each man but left these domestic ties behind and moved to Hollywood, where she wrote film scripts for Cecil B. DeMille and quickly achieved successes such as Mr Wu (1927). She was regarded as one of Hollywood’s top three screenwriters. Studio and publishers’ publicity from this time reveals that she invented a number of different and exotic identities for herself in this new environment. She also became the mistress of Cecil B. DeMille’s brother, William de Mille (1878–1955), and bore him a child, Richard. During the pregnancy she was diagnosed with tuberculosis and gave the child (who remained ignorant of his parentage until adulthood) up to adoption by Cecil B. DeMille. While being treated she produced short stories, collected as Doorways in Drumorty (USA, 1925; Britain, 1926). A novel, Dark Star (1929), followed. She died of tuberculosis in a sanatorium in New Mexico, still pursuing her writing career and resolutely refusing to allow her role as invalid to be used in publicity material. Her ashes were brought back to Scotland and scattered on the hill above Strichen. Lorna Moon’s fiction drew on her early experiences in Strichen, moving between dark comedy, satire and melodrama in its depiction of farming and fishing communities in north-east Scotland. Her short stories demonstrated her eye for detail – the intricate hypocrisies of small-town life – while her novel, ambitious but uneven, suggested her dramatic potential. Although successful commercially in America and Britain, she was regarded as controversial in her home village and remained critically neglected until the late 20th century. Her fiction has a freshness of style and candour in the representation of small-town communities and an energetic critique of the ways in which women’s lives are shaped by moral and social policing, making her one of the significant voices in 20th-century fiction of the north-east of Scotland. In 2010, Strichen Community Council placed a memorial plaque at the site of her parents’ Temperance Hotel, 11 High St, Strichen. gn • Lilly Library, Indiana: Corr.; Private collection, Richard de Mille; Strichen Public Library: Lorna Moon archive. Moon, L., Works as above. Norquay, G. (ed.) (2002) The Collected Works of Lorna Moon. de Mille, R. (1998) My Secret Mother, Lorna Moon; *ODNB (2004); Ruvoli, JoAnne. ‘Lorna Moon’, Women Film Pioneers

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LUMSDEN Project, https://wfpp.cdrs.columbia.edu/pioneer/ccp-lornamoon (Bibl.). LOWE, Helen Millar, MBE, born Duns 10 Dec. 1897, died Edinburgh 6 Nov. 1997. Accountant, millionaire. Daughter of Margaret Trotter, and James Lowe, coal merchant. Helen Lowe left Berwickshire High School at 16 to work as a clerk in the Post Office Bank in London, earning her father’s disapproval. She later trained in accountancy in Edinburgh, becoming one of the first women chartered accountants in Scotland. Having ‘put up her plate’ in Queen Street, she ran her own firm almost until her death, aged 99. A strong character, Helen Lowe advised many societies and charities, particularly those for women and the elderly, and campaigned unsuccessfully for the continuation of the Bruntsfield Hospital. She never married, a wartime engagement having ended in 1918, and lived frugally in her parents’ house. She joked to her gardener that she could not afford a foreign holiday, but on her death (intestate) left £7 million from property and investments. She was awarded the MBE in 1964. sr

• The Scotsman, Evening News, Daily Record, 11 Nov. 1997 (obits). Private information and family records. LUMSDEN, Louisa Innes, DBE, born Aberdeen 31 Dec. 1840, died Edinburgh 2 Jan. 1935. Educational pioneer, suffragist, animal welfare campaigner. Daughter of Jane Forbes of Echt, and Clements Lumsden, Aberdeen advocate. The youngest of seven children, Louisa Lumsden was educated at private schools in Cheltenham, Brussels and London, before returning to the family home, Glenbogie, for several years. She was one of the first five students at Hitchin College (1869–72) and, with Rachel Cook from St Andrews (later Mrs Scott, 1848–1905, educational campaigner, suffragist and editorial collaborator on the Manchester Guardian), one of the first three women to pass the Classical Tripos (1873). First resident tutor in Classics, Girton College (1873–5), Louisa Lumsden resigned in disagreement with Emily Davies and the Girton executive committee over students’ grievances and her own status. She became Classical Tutor at Cheltenham Ladies’ College 1876–7, then first headmistress at St Leonards School, St Andrews, 1877–82. Failing to be elected Mistress of Girton in 1884, she returned to the family home in

Aberdeenshire, serving on two rural school boards. In 1894 she became the first Warden of University Hall for Women, University of St Andrews. She hoped to turn it into a Scottish Girton, but problems with the governing committee led to her resignation in 1900, although she was mollified by an honorary degree in 1911. Single-minded, uncertain-tempered, forthright and geographically restless, she struggled in the institutional posts she considered it her patriotic duty to accept. Her problems were exacerbated by an intense homoerotic friendship with Constance Maynard (1849–1935, later Principal, Westfield College), which began at Girton and continued when they were teachers at Cheltenham and St Leonards. Constance Maynard was intensely devout, while Louisa Lumsden was not, although she later became a vice-president of the SCLWS. She travelled widely, often with her sister *Rachel Lumsden. Her forte was public speaking. From 1908 president of the AWSS and later on the executive committee of the SFWSS, she campaigned for women’s suffrage and women’s rights throughout Scotland, alongside women such as *Elsie Inglis and *Frances Balfour. She loved animals and campaigned widely for animal welfare and antivivisection, editing Our Fellow Mortals for 11 years. Intensely Scottish and intensely patriotic, in 1914 she addressed wartime recruitment meetings and worked in the chemistry laboratories at St Andrews for the Ministry of Scientific Warfare. When in her 80s, she worked for the Unionist Party and Women’s Rural Industries, and was created DBE in 1925. The Lumsden Wing, University Hall, University of St Andrews, was opened in 1962. She was working on a poem the day she died. lrm • Girton College Archives: Corr.; Museum of London, Suffragette Fellowship Collection: 75/16/18, Corr.; St Leonards School Archives; Univ. of St Andrews Archives: UY3778; Westfield College Archives: Constance Maynard’s autobiography & diaries. Lumsden, L. I. (1875) ‘Woman’s work, II. Girls’ schools’, The Ladies’ Edinburgh Magazine, 1 (7 & 8), pp. 208–20, 238–46, (n.d.: 1884) On the Higher Education of Women in Great Britain and Ireland, (1911) ‘The position of woman in history’, in The Position of Women: actual and ideal, (1933) Yellow Leaves: memories of a long life. Banks, O. (1990) Biographical Dictionary of British Feminists, vol. 2: Supp. 1900–45; Firth, C. B. (1949) Constance Louisa Maynard; MacDonald, L. A. O. (2002) Unique & Glorious Mission; ODNB (2004); The Scotsman, 4 Jan. 1935 (obit.); Vicinus, M. (1985) Independent Women; Walker, L. (ed.) (1996) Dame Louisa Lumsden.

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LUMSDEN LUMSDEN, Rachel Frances, born Aberdeen 17 April 1835, died Aberdeen 22 April 1908. Pioneering nurse. Daughter of Jane Forbes of Echt, and Clements Lumsden, advocate. The fifth of seven children, when her sister *Louisa Lumsden left for Hitchin College in 1869, Rachel Lumsden trained as a nurse at the Hospital for Sick Children, Great Ormond Street, London and worked at King’s College Hospital. In 1877, she was appointed superintendent of the new Aberdeen Hospital for Sick Children, later being elected an honorary president and attending the meetings of the all-male executive committee. In 1885, she was appointed (at her own insistence, unpaid) as superintendent, head nurse and housekeeper/matron at the Aberdeen Royal Infirmary. The superintendent had previously always been a man. By 1891 she had initiated a three-year training course, reputedly the first in Scotland. She advised on the Jubilee extension scheme, and on retirement in 1897 received an album signed by 63 Aberdeen doctors, and a message from the Queen. A member of the Council for Queen Victoria’s Jubilee Institute for Nurses (QVJIN) (1891–7) and Scottish representative on the executive committee of the BNA, founded in 1887 by Ethel Manson (see Stewart, Eliza) she actively supported the key demand of state registration of nurses. Rachel Lumsden was succeeded as unpaid superintendent of the Children’s Hospital by her elder sister, Katharine Maria (1831–1912). Almost blind, Katharine Lumsden had cared for their widowed mother until her death in 1883. Like Rachel, an able administrator, she organised fundraising bazaars and house-to-house collections to finance the hospital. Honorary secretary of the Aberdeen District Nursing Association for almost 20 years, she also succeeded Rachel in QVJIN, 1897–1912. An active, philanthropic figure, Katharine Lumsden campaigned for causes such as fireguards in the home and for an Aberdeen crematorium (she was herself cremated). She contributed to Blackwood’s Magazine and Chambers’s Journal. lrm

K. (1988) ‘Rachel Frances Lumsden of Glenbogie’, Aberdeen Postgraduate Medical Bulletin, 22(1), pp. 18–20.

• Annual Reports of the Directors of the Aberdeen Hospital for Sick Children; Northern Health Services Archives, Aberdeen: ARI, (R)AHSC and ADNA collections. Aberdeen Daily Journal, 24 April 1908 (obit. Rachel Lumsden), 2 Dec. 1912 (obit. Katharine); Aberdeen Free Press, 2 Dec. 1912; Levack, I. D. and Dudley, H. A. F. (1992) Aberdeen Royal Infirmary; Lumsden, L. I. (1933) Yellow Leaves: memories of a long life ; Pedersen, S. (2002) ‘Within their sphere? Women correspondents to Aberdeen daily newspapers 1900–1914’, Northern Scotland, 22, pp. 159–66; Webster,

LYALL, David

OBE, born Oxford 27 April 1924, died Edinburgh 20 June 1994. Social worker. Daughter of Mary Theodora Colville, and Rev. David Colville Lusk, Church of Scotland minister. The youngest of five children, Janet Lusk spent her early years in Oxford; her father was a chaplain to the university. In 1933, the family moved to Edinburgh, where David Lusk became minister of West Coates Church. She attended St Leonards School, St Andrews until 1942, when she joined the ATS. Following wartime service, she studied French and Spanish at the University of Edinburgh. She began her social work career at Edinburgh Children’s Holiday Home before undertaking a postgraduate childcare course at the University of Birmingham (1955–6). Returning to Scotland, she was a caseworker at the Guild of Service, Edinburgh, working with ‘unmarried mothers’ and adoptive parents. In 1960, she worked with the University of Edinburgh to launch the first childcare course in Scotland, with placements at the Guild. In 1962, she was appointed Director of the Guild of Service, a post she held until retirement in 1984. She died following a road accident. Janet Lusk pioneered professional practice in social work with children and families, in Scotland and across the UK. She was acknowledged as the leading authority on adoption in Scotland in the 1960s and 70s, and served on several key committees including the Houghton Committee on Adoption, on which she was the sole Scottish social work representative. She was awarded the OBE in recognition of her work. She is remembered by her sister and many friends as a keen gardener and needleworker and a wonderful companion. vec

LUSK, Janet Theodora,

• Interviews with Janet Lusk, 1990, and Rev. Mary Levison (sister), 2003. Cree, V. E. (1995) From Public Streets to Private Lives: the changing task of social work; The Scotsman, 2 July 1994 (obit.).

(1859–1943)

see SWAN, Anne Shepherd (Annie)

born 1775, died after 1825. Traditional ballad singer. Daughter of Mr Lyle, weaver. The only source for the few known facts about Agnes Lyle’s life is the Tory antiquary William Motherwell, author of Minstrelsy Ancient and Modern (1827). His search for items brought him to

LYLE, Agnes, of Kilbarchan,

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the active ballad community of Kilbarchan, where he visited her repeatedly, gathering a repertoire that included 22 complete ballads. Her stock of songs, the subject of The Ballad Matrix (McCarthy 1990), was representative of the broader ballad repertoire of south-west Scotland, including the popular ‘Twa Sisters’ (Child 10F), ‘Mary Hamilton’ (Child 173B) and ‘Gypsy Laddie’ (Child 200C), as well as the rare ‘Lord William’ (Child 254A), of which hers is the only known complete version, text and air. The structure and technique of her ballads is the epitome of the traditional singer’s art. But the consistent rearrangement of plot, character and diction to create a picture of the honest Scots working class betrayed by the perfidious gentry expresses the radical politics of a region and era polarised along class lines. The gentry, after the French revolution and the Napoleonic wars, had come to identify with the crown and fear the working class, while the working class, stirred by post-war depression in the weaving industry, increasingly embraced political radicalism. These unusual ballads demonstrate how a creative singer could freely reframe traditional materials to meet new situations and express a view. Whatever she thought of the Tory gentleman who came to visit, the weaver’s daughter trusted him with her subversive songs, weeping openly as she sang of forbidden love and class perfidy. wbm

called her the ‘nanny-lioness’ (niania-l’vitsa), also known in Russian as Evgenia Vasil’evna Laion. She remained with the imperial family for almost 40 years and was described in 1835 as ‘quite a character . . . [T]hey all doted on her and could not exist without her . . . she kept their money, their jewels etc. and had charge of everything’ (Seaman, p. 54). Jenny Lyon was not the only Scottish nanny/ governess recruited to imperial service. The empress Catherine had earlier appointed two Scottish nurses for her elder grandchildren: Pauline Gessler and Sarah Nichols, n. Primrose. In the nineteenth century, several more Scottish nurses entered the imperial household, including Catherine McKinnon (c. 1778–1858), employed during the reign of Alexander I as nanny to Alexander II (1818–81). These Scotswomen were ‘responsible, it was said, for giving the Russian rulers a particularly Scottish lilt to their English’ (Cross, 2016). SR

• Glasgow Univ. Library: MS Murray 501, Motherwell Manuscript; Harvard Univ. Library: MS 25241.56F: Motherwell Ballad Notebook Facsimile. Brown, M. E. (1997) ‘Old singing women and the canons of Scottish balladry and song’, in HSWW; Child, F. J. (ed.) (1882–98) The English and Scottish Popular Ballads; McCarthy, W. B. (1990) The Ballad Matrix ; Motherwell, W. (1827) Minstrelsy Ancient and Modern; ODNB (2004).

LYON, Mary

LYNDSAY, David

1830)

• Cross, A. G. (1997) On the Banks of the Neva: chapters for the lives and careers of the British in 18th-century Russia, (2016) private communication; Lincoln, W. B. (1989) Nicholas I: emperor and autocrat of all the Russias; Seaman, W. A. L. and Sewell, J. R. (eds) (1973) The Russian Journal of Lady Londonderry 1836–37; Sheets, J. W. (1993) ‘Miss Catherine McKinnon’s Russian fortune’, Scottish Studies 31, pp. 88–100; Shvidovsky, D. (1996) The Empress and the Architect.

born before 1738, died Edinburgh 9 May 1754. Rouping-woman. Daughter of John Lyon of Whytewell in Angus. Sibilla Lyon married Charles Dickson, an Edinburgh goldsmith and son of Charles Dickson of Cannonside, Provost of Forfar. They had three children. In poor circumstances after her husband’s death in 1738, she petitioned the goldsmiths’ incorporation for financial help and was granted £12 Scots per quarter. From the 1730s to 1800 the names of rouping-women (pronounced rooping), who valued the household effects of the deceased, appear regularly in Edinburgh testaments. It is not known why these women’s names were recorded. Earlier, the practice was simply to record that the valuation was made by ‘skillful persons’. After 1800, those who did valuations were increasingly called ‘auctioneers’, and were often men. Sibilla Lyon was recorded as rouping between 1741 and 1754. Her testament was recorded on 22 August 1754. ecs

LYON, Sibilla,

see DODS, Mary Diana (c. 1790–c.

LYON, Jane (Jenny), m. Vecheslova,

see GRIEVE, Mary Margaret (1906–98)

born Edinburgh 1771, died Tsarskoe Selo 1842. Nanny to Russian imperial family. Daughter of William Lyon, ­craftsman. Jenny Lyon’s father and elder brothers had been recruited in 1784 by Catherine the Great’s Scottish architect, Charles Cameron, to assist in building works at Tsarskoe Selo, the imperial estate near St Petersburg. When Jenny joined them later she was appointed nanny in 1796 to Catherine’s grandson, the infant Grand-Duke Nicholas, the future Tsar Nicholas I (1796–1855), caring for him until the age of seven and retaining his affection thereafter. He

• NRS: CC8/8/115/1, Edinburgh Commissary Records, Register of Testaments; GD1/482/2, Records of Edinburgh Goldmiths’ Incorporation; WWEE (Bibl.).

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M MACADAM, Elizabeth, born Chryston, near Glasgow, 10 Oct. 1871, died Edinburgh 25 Oct. 1948. Social worker. Daughter of Elizabeth Whyte, and Thomas Macadam, Presbyterian ­minister. Elizabeth Macadam’s childhood was spent partly in Montreal, Canada. She and her sister returned to Scotland as young women and lived for some years in Edinburgh. In 1898, she was awarded a Pfeiffer scholarship to train in social work at the Women’s University Settlement in Southwark, London, and in 1902 became the first salaried warden of the Victoria Women’s Settlement in Liverpool, a position she held until 1910. She proved an imaginative and capable head. She pioneered many Liverpool medical and educational services for women and children at the settlement and inspired local well-off young women and female students to staff them. Yet she believed firmly that social work should be a profession and not simply a pastime and in 1904 launched a visionary training programme, combining lectures on poverty and politics with supervised practical work. In 1910, the University of Liverpool absorbed this programme and hired Elizabeth Macadam, as lecturer, to run it. Elizabeth Macadam’s success caught the attention of Seebohm Rowntree, who brought her to London early in the First World War to train welfare workers for factories run by the Ministry of Munitions. In 1919 she left Liverpool permanently to become secretary to a new, London-based Joint Universities Council for Social Science, which was to co-ordinate training programmes. The move caused a personal crisis, for she had developed a close friendship with Eleanor Rathbone, by then a Liverpool city councillor. Rathbone was determined not to hamper Macadam’s career and in 1919 the two women bought a house in Westminster. But in the end it was Eleanor Rathbone who profited more from the move: the Westminster house became the base for her blossoming political career and Macadam’s organising skills were an asset to many Rathbone campaigns. In the 1920s, when Rathbone served as President of NUSEC, Macadam became an officer and the editor of its paper; after Rathbone’s election as MP in 1929, Macadam helped to manage her complex

parliamentary career. Practical where Rathbone was abstracted, s­ traightforward where Rathbone was diffident, Elizabeth Macadam struck some observers as an ideal ‘political wife’. Nevertheless, she always remained abreast of developments in social work, in 1934 publishing what remains the best account of the changing relationship between voluntary services and the state between the wars, The New Philanthropy. After Eleanor Rathbone’s death in 1946, Elizabeth Macadam returned to Edinburgh. sp • Victoria Women’s Settlement, Annual Reports; Univ. of Liverpool Library, Special Collections and Archives, records of the School of Training for Social Work. *ODNB (2004) (Macadam, Elizabeth; Rathbone, Eleanor); Pedersen, S. (2004) Eleanor Rathbone and the Politics of Conscience ; Simey, M. (1992) Charity Rediscovered: a study of philanthropic effort in nineteenth-century Liverpool.

n. McMackin, CBE, born Glasgow 26 April 1896, died Glasgow, 26 Feb. 1976. Labour councillor and MP. Daughter of Winifred Deeney, and Charles McMackin, ­publican. Educated at the Franciscan Convent, Glasgow, Mary McMackin trained as a fevers nurse at Knightswood Hospital, Glasgow. She married Joseph Alexander McAlister, a window-cleaning contractor, and they had four daughters. During the Second World War she served in the Civil Nursing Reserve and Postal Censorship. She was a councillor with Glasgow City Council (1945–58) and a JP (1947–51). Her nursing background shaped her interest in health issues, and she was Convener of the Health and Welfare Committee (1952–5). In March 1958, she captured the Glasgow Kelvingrove seat from the Conservatives, defeating Katharine Elliot, widow of Walter Elliot, Unionist MP for Kelvingrove (1950–8), in what Elliot referred to as ‘a good clean women’s fight’ (Daily Record 1958). Although the byelection was seen as ‘symbolic’ (Glasgow Herald 1958), she lost the seat at the 1959 general election. Afterwards she retained an interest in public life, holding positions on the National Assistance Board (1961–6), and the Supplementary Benefits Commission (1966–7) (Department Chairman 1967). cb MCALISTER, Mary Agnes Josephine,

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MACASKILL • Daily Record, 14 March 1958; Glasgow Herald, 14 and 20 March 1958; ODNB (2004); WWW, 1971–80 (1981). MACARTHUR, Mary Reid, m. Anderson, born Glasgow 13 Aug. 1880, died London 1 Jan. 1921. Trade unionist and Labour activist. Daughter of Anne Elizabeth Martin, and John Duncan Macarthur, draper. Mary Macarthur was the eldest of three surviving daughters. Her father was a prominent Conservative citizen and businessman. After leaving Glasgow Girls’ High School she spent a year studying in Germany and on her return became a bookkeeper in the family business in Ayr, where the family had moved in 1895; it was then that she first became interested in the trade union movement. In 1901, she joined the SAU and soon became secretary of the Ayr branch. She was elected to the Union’s National Executive, the first woman to be a member, and quickly rose to the position of president of the Scottish National District. In 1903, she moved to London, where she became secretary of the WTUL, a role she continued to undertake until her death. Through the WTUL, she campaigned for better working conditions for women workers, including homeworkers, organised strikes and worked to establish trade boards and minimum wage rates. In 1904 and 1908 she was a delegate to the International Congress of Women in Berlin and the USA. In 1906, she was involved in the formation of the Anti-Sweating League, which established wage boards and set minimum wage rates. That year, she established the NFWW, an organisation that in Scotland alone had a membership of around 2,000 women before the First World War. She was the Federation’s first president before becoming the general secretary. In 1907, she founded the Women Worker, a monthly newspaper for female trade union activists. She continued to protect the interests of women workers during the war, particularly those working in munitions, not only through the NFWW, which recruited widely during 1914–18, but also as a member of the War Emergency Workers National Committee, Reconstruction Committee, and as honorary secretary of the Wartime Central Committee of Women’s Training and Employment. In 1921, the NFWW amalgamated with the National Union of General Workers. Mary Macarthur was an active member of the ILP in London and on its National Council from 1909 to 1912. In London, she worked closely with two other Scots, James Keir Hardie and

Ramsay MacDonald. In 1911, she married Will Anderson, also an active member of the ILP and an MP (1914–18). They had one daughter. Mary Macarthur was one of the three main speakers at the memorial service for Keir Hardie in Glasgow in October 1915. In 1919, she stood as a parliamentary candidate for Stourbridge, Worcestershire, but was narrowly defeated, probably due to her antiwar stance and support for the Russian Revolution. She was elected to the NEC of the ILP (1919–20). Will Anderson died of influenza in 1919, after which she continued to campaign for the rights of women workers, attending ILO conferences in Switzerland and the USA. Two years later she died of stomach cancer, a death described as ‘a tragic loss not only to her friends but to the cause of all that is sane & wise in the Labour Movement’ (Markham 1921). YGB • Smillie, R., Ramsay Macdonald, J. and MacArthur, M. (1915) Memoir of James Keir Hardie MP and Tributes to his Work (pamphlet from memorial service held in St Andrews Hall, Glasgow, 3 Oct. 1915). Bondfield, M. (1950) A Life’s Work, etc.; Hamilton, M. A. (1925) Mary Macarthur: a biographical sketch; Markham, V., Letter to E. S. Haldane, 2 Jan. 1921, in J. Alberti (1990) ‘Inside out: Elizabeth Haldane as a women’s suffrage survivor in the 1920s and 1930s’, Women’s Studies International Forum, vol. 13, 1–2, p. 122; ODNB (2004). MACASKILL, Ishbel Margaret, n. MacIver (Iseabail NicAsgaill), born Loanhead, Edinburgh, 14 March

1941, died Inverness 31 March 2011. Traditional Gaelic singer, teacher and activist. Adopted daughter of Christina MacLeod, and Allan MacIver, weaver, serving in RNVR, of Broker, Isle of Lewis. Ishbel MacIver attended school at the Nicolson Institute, Stornoway. After secretarial studies at Stow College and work in Glasgow, she married Bill MacAskill from Lochinver, and devoted herself to raising their four children. Although she started singing almost as soon as she could talk, it remained a private pleasure for many years. At the National Mod in Lewis in 1979, she was persuaded to sing at a fringe event, where her distinctive voice and unique style caused an immediate sensation. Thereafter, Ishbel MacAskill performed throughout Scotland and abroad, singing at the World Festival of Island Cultures in South Korea, and representing Scotland at the Smithsonian Folklife Festival (Washington, 2003). She frequently appeared at the Celtic Connections festival in Glasgow and sang at the inaugural Celtic Colours Festival (Cape Breton, Canada, 1997). She

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sang alongside Ricky Skaggs and Nancy Griffiths on BBC Scotland’s Transatlantic Sessions, and played Nora, the shopkeeper in the 1990s STV Gaelic soap Machair. To many children attending Fèisean – ­community-based Gaelic arts tuition festivals – she was a popular teacher of Gaelic songs. She also campaigned for the future of the National Centre of Excellence in Traditional Music at Plockton. KJM • MacAskill, I., Recordings: Sìoda (1994); Essentially Ishbel (2000). The Scotsman, 4 April 2011 (obit.); eODNB. Information from family and friends. MACBETH, Ann, born Bolton 25 Sept. 1875, died Patterdale 23 March 1948. Embroiderer and teacher. Daughter of Annie MacNicol, and Norman Macbeth, engineer. The eldest of nine children, Ann Macbeth enrolled at Glasgow School of Art in 1897. On completing her studies in 1901 she became assistant to *Jessie Newbery. She exhibited at the Glasgow International Exhibition of 1901 and the following year won a silver medal at the Turin International Exhibition of Decorative Arts. Her striking embroidery work was highly regarded and given regular coverage in The Studio. In 1904 she took over the classes for teachers, and began teaching metalwork in 1906, bookbinding from 1907 to 1911, and ceramic decoration from 1912. She also designed for Alexander Morton & Co., Donald Bros. of Dundee, and Liberty. In 1908, she became head of the Embroidery Department and, in 1911, with educational psychologist Margaret Swanson, she published Educational Needlecraft, a textbook which won international acclaim and influenced needlework teaching for many years. During this time, Ann Macbeth was also an active suffragette, and a member of the Glasgow Branch of the WSPU: in 1912, in London, she suffered two weeks of solitary confinement with forcible feeding. Moving to Patterdale in 1920, she taught handicrafts through the Women’s Institute in an attempt to alleviate local hardship. Ann Macbeth had a strong work ethic and her prolific output included books, painted ceramics and embroideries, which she regularly exhibited with the GSLA. She received honorary diplomas from Paris, Tunis, Ghent, Budapest and Chicago. LA

• GSA Archives: letter from Ann Macbeth to Mr Groundwater, School Secretary, 11 May 1912. Swanson, M. and Macbeth, A. (1911) Educational Needlecraft.

Burkhauser, J. (ed.) (1990) Glasgow Girls; Cumming, E. (ed.) (1992) Glasgow 1900 Art and Design; Macfarlane, F. C. and Arthur, E. (1980) Glasgow School of Art Embroidery 1894–1920; ODNB (2004) (see Glasgow Girls); Swain, M. (1974) ‘Miss Ann Macbeth (1975–1948)’, Embroidery 25, pp. 8–11. MACBETH, Lady see GRUOCH, Queen of Scotland (Lady Macbeth) (fl. early/mid-11th century). MCCALLUM, Janet Hutchinson (Jennie), m. Richardson, born Dunfermline 27 July 1881,

died Pretoria, South Africa, 24 March 1946. Suffragette. Daughter of Janet Hutchinson, and John McCallum, stone mason. The eldest of thirteen children, Jennie McCallum is one of a very small number of Scottish women suffrage activists from a working-class background about whom there is any information. Her father was employed in the construction of the Forth Rail Bridge. She worked in the Dunfermline linen industry, where she was a leading figure in the TWU and became involved in the women’s rights movement. A member of the WFL, she spoke at meetings throughout Scotland. In October 1908, she was one of fourteen demonstrators arrested for creating a disturbance outside the House of Commons while other suffragettes disrupted the Ladies’ Gallery. She was imprisoned in Holloway for a month and on her return to Dunfermline could get no further employment in the linen industry. On 17 December 1915, when she was secretary of the TWU, she married Harry Richardson (b. 1879), an engine fitter. They had two sons and a daughter and in the 1920s emigrated to South Africa. LK

• AGC; ‘Dunfermline suffragette’, Dunfermline Press, 2 March 1968; ODNB (2004). MACCALZEAN, Euphame, born before 1558, died Edinburgh 25 June 1591. One of the North Berwick witches. Daughter of Thomas MacCalzean, Lord Cliftonhall, advocate and Senator of the College of Justice. As daughter and heir of Lord Cliftonhall, Euphame MacCalzean was connected by birth and marriage to the powerful Edinburgh legal community. She married Patrick Moscrop, an advocate’s son, and had at least five children. Moscrop appears to have taken her surname. There is some evidence that the marriage was not sanctioned by the Kirk, and may have been Catholic. Euphame MacCalzean was a pivotal figure in one of the most important episodes of Scottish

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witch-hunting, the North Berwick Witch Trials of 1590–1. Her trial had important political and legal ramifications, and the allegations against her provide insight into the construction of witches as ‘unnatural’ women who subverted the natural order. She was alleged to have been one of the witches, including *Agnes Sampson and others, who tried to use magic to kill James VI. She was an important link between the North Berwick Witch Trial and incriminating the Earl of Bothwell in plots against the King. The charges against her portray her as a domineering and forceful woman who, in addition to seeking the King’s death, used her magic in attempts to gain her husband’s love, then to try to kill him and his relatives, and even to avoid the pains of childbirth. The evidence makes connections between the ‘treason’ of a woman attempting to kill her husband, and the treason of the witches in their attempts at regicide. Despite an apparently spirited defence by several notable lawyers, Euphame MacCalzean was executed in 1591. Her sentence of being burned alive was harsh – most witches were strangled before being burned. There was a partially successful attempt to clear her name after her death, and some of her property was returned to her heirs in 1592. Her trial and execution may have helped introduce many of the current demonological ideas into Scotland, and set an important precedent. In the trial of *Issobell Young in 1629, the prosecutor cited her case as precedent for allowing women’s testimony in cases of witchcraft. sam

Alexander, 4th Duke of Gordon, who took her to live at Gordon Castle, Morayshire, in the early 1820s. Her privileged life ended with her grandfather’s death in 1827, when her father became 5th Duke of Gordon. The new Duchess, who had no children, dismissed Georgiana to earn her living as a portrait painter in Edinburgh, which she did with considerable success. At Gordon Castle on 25 September 1830, she married Edinburgh lawyer Andrew Murison McCrae. He emigrated to Australia in 1838 and Georgiana followed in 1841 with their four sons. In Melbourne, Andrew McCrae’s legal practice failed. He took up land at Arthur’s Seat, on the Mornington Peninsula, where the last of their five daughters was born. In spite of near-bankruptcy, Andrew McCrae forbade his wife to paint portraits for money, a decision she bitterly resented. From 1851, when their pastoral venture failed, the couple lived apart. A legacy, promised by her father, was withheld by the Duchess. Georgiana McCrae is remembered for some fine portraits and landscapes now held in Australian galleries, and for the beauty, intelligence and quick wit that made her an influential figure among artists, musicians and writers. An unwilling emigrant, she made a remarkable contribution to the cultural life of colonial Melbourne. bn • Fisher Library, Univ. of Sydney: McCrae Papers; State Library of Victoria: McCrae Family Papers; National Trust of Australia (Victoria) Collection: McCrae Papers (Harry F. Chaplin Collection). ADB; McCrae, H. (ed.) (1934) Georgiana’s Journal; Niall, B. (1994) Georgiana: a biography of Georgiana McCrae; WoM.

• Chambers, R. (ed.) (1859) Domestic Annals of Scotland from the Reformation to the Revolution; Normand, L. and Roberts, G. (eds) (2000) Witchcraft in Early Modern Scotland: James VI’s daemonology and the North Berwick witches; ODNB (2004) (North Berwick witches); Yeoman, L. (2001) ‘Hunting the rich witch in Scotland: high status witch suspects and their persecutors, 1590–1650’, in J. Goodare (ed.) The Scottish Witch-hunt in Context. MCCRAE, Georgiana Huntly, n. Gordon, born London 15 March 1804, died Melbourne, Australia, 24 May 1890. Painter. Illegitimate daughter of Jane Graham, and George Gordon, Marquis of Huntly. Acknowledged by her father and baptised as a Gordon, Georgiana was educated by French émigrés in Somers Town, London. Exceptionally gifted in painting and drawing, she studied under such masters as John Varley and Charles Hayter. Aged 12, she had a landscape accepted by the Royal Academy; aged 16, she won the Society of Arts silver medal for her portrait of her grandfather,

MCCRINDLE, Jennifer (Jenny), born Glasgow 19 Sept. 1968, died Glasgow 26 Oct. 2014. Actor. Daughter of Libby Robertson, office worker, and George McCrindle, insurance agent. Jenny McCrindle, attracted to acting while at Clydebank High School, joined Scottish Youth Theatre in her teens. Her inventiveness, ­originality and comic skills quickly drew attention from writers and directors like David Kane and Iain Heggie during a particularly creative phase in Scottish drama. First professional appearances included Edinburgh Theatre Workshop’s 1986 productions A White Bird Passes and Under the Influence and Charlie Gormley’s 1986 film comedy Heavenly Pursuits, featuring Tom Conti and Helen Mirren. In the late 1980s, Glasgow Tron Theatre spoof pantomimes – including Alan Cumming and Forbes Masson’s Babes in the Wood, where she was a memorable bee, and

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Peter Capaldi and Craig Ferguson’s Sleeping Beauty – she played comic roles brilliantly. She featured in ­historic stage p ­ roductions – Michel Tremblay’s The Guid Sisters (1989) and David Kane’s Dumbstruck (1994) – and played legendary television roles in Your Cheatin’ Heart (1990) and Looking After Jojo (1998). The Acid House (1998) saw her film career develop. She performed in two short films, Somersault and Rice Paper Stars (2000), before retiring after being d ­ iagnosed with MS in 1999. Although her symptoms were severe, confining her to a wheelchair, she remained fiercely independent. Joyce McMillan described her as ‘a tiny, beautiful figure who combined a fragile appearance with an extraordinary, wild and wicked sense of humour’ having ‘a special and completely original place in the story of late-twentieth century Scottish drama’ (Scotsman 2014). IB • IMDb; The Guardian, 11 Nov. 2014, The Scotsman, 1 Nov. 2014, The Stage, 4 Nov. 2014 (obits). MACDONALD, Agnes, born Edinburgh 8 Sept. 1882, died Edinburgh 16 Oct. 1966. Suffrage and women’s citizenship campaigner. Daughter of Euphemia Henderson, and Alexander Macdonald, wine and spirit merchant. Fifth of six children and the only daughter, Agnes Macdonald was brought up to be a ‘daughter of the house who stayed home’ (Dispatch 1962), despite her mother taking over the business in 1893. She later said she joined the WSPU because she was one of ‘too many women running around with no training to do anything’ (ibid.). In March 1912, she was imprisoned in Holloway for two months for window smashing, an experience she found instructive for her later social work. A founder member of ECWA in 1918, and its paid secretary until 1939, Agnes MacDonald participated fully in its ambitious programme. This included campaigns for more women councillors and MPs; for equal pay and an end to the ­marriage bar; for pre-school nurseries, improvements to public health and social housing; against child sexual abuse; and for a national maternity service. After retiring, she did Quaker relief work for European refugees and was a ­governor of a progressive school for delinquent boys. si

• Macdonald, A., Evening Dispatch, 12 Dec. 1962. Innes, S. (1998) ‘Love and Work: Feminism, family and ideas of equality and citizenship, Britain 1900–39’, PhD, Univ. of Edinburgh; *ODNB (2004).

n. Johnston, born Barony, Lanark, 20 Nov. 1849, died Edinburgh 21 Oct. 1924. Artistic bookbinder. Daughter of Lucy Leitch, and Fred Johnston, bank cashier. Brought up in Lanark and Glasgow, Annie Johnston in 1880 married William Rae Macdonald, secretary of the Scottish Metropolitan Life Assurance Company and later Carrick Pursuivant and Albany Herald. Their bourgeois Edinburgh circle included the first SNPG curator, John Miller Gray, and, through him, the artist *Phoebe Anna Traquair. John Gray and Annie Macdonald took ‘pleasure in searching out and enjoying old bindings in libraries . . . Then we wished to try it ourselves’ (Sutherland 1899, p. 420). Walter B. Blaikie allowed evening access to his printing workrooms at T. & A. Constable, where Annie Macdonald developed a method of embossing leather ‘worked on the book after it is covered, with one small tool’ (Anstruther 1902). Her uncoloured, medievalist figurative bindings were accepted for the Women’s Work section of the ‘Victorian Era’ exhibition (Earl’s Court, London 1897) where they were seen by London bookseller-publisher Frank Karslake (Sutherland 1899, p. 420). Their discussions led to the 1898 formation of the Guild of Women Binders, a British exhibiting collective including the dozen-strong ESU group, which exhibited throughout Britain and at the 1900 Exposition Universelle in Paris. ec MACDONALD, Ann Smith (Annie),

• Anstruther, G. E. (1902) The Bindings of Tomorrow; Callen, A. (1979) Angel in the Studio, pp. 191–2; Catalogue of Exhibition of Artistic Bookbinding by Women (1898); ‘StudioTalk’, The Studio (1898), p. 112; Cumming, E. (2006) Hand, Heart and Soul: the Arts and Crafts Movement in Scotland; Sutherland, D. M. (1899) ‘The Guild of Women Binders’, The Magazine of Art, pp. 420–3; Tidcombe, M. E. (1996) Women Bookbinders 1880–1920, pp. 117–8; Waller, A. C. (1983) ‘The Guild of Women-Binders’, The Private Library, 3rd series, vol. 6: 3, pp. 99–131. MCDONALD, Camelia Ethel, born 24 Feb. 1909, Bellshill, died Glasgow 1 Dec. 1960. Anarchist envoy to Spanish civil war, printer. Daughter of Daisy Watts, and Andrew McDonald, coach painter. One of nine children, Ethel McDonald attended Motherwell High School, and at 16 joined the ILP and left home. After several jobs, she became secretary to the charismatic Guy Aldred (1886–1963) and later to the antiparliamentary and anti-fascist United Socialist Movement he founded in Glasgow. In October 1936, with Guy Aldred’s companion Jane (Jenny)

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MCDONALD Patrick (1884–1971), Ethel McDonald went to Spain at the request of the CNT-FAI (anarchist federation). They could barely ask for a cup of coffee in Spanish, but Ethel McDonald was soon making broadcasts in English on behalf of the Barcelona Anarchist radio station: ‘her Scottish voice was a special attraction and her broadcasts aroused comment as far afield as the USA’ (John Caldwell quoted Hodgart n. d., p. 11). Together the two women experienced the May Days in Barcelona in 1937, when the communists attacked the anarchist headquarters: ‘we [were] filling cartridge clips for the soldiers and preparing meals for them’ (ibid., p. 14). Three hundred of their comrades were killed. Guy Aldred published the women’s accounts in his Barcelona Bulletin in Glasgow. Jenny Patrick returned home, but Ethel McDonald remained through further persecution of the anarchists. She visited anarchists in prison, helped others escape, and became known as the ‘Scots Scarlet Pimpernel’ and the ‘Bellshill Girl Anarchist’. Imprisoned for several days herself, she spent further weeks in hiding, unable to exit Spain legally. Consular intervention got her out and she was welcomed back to Glasgow, telling the press: ‘I went to Spain full of hopes and dreams . . . I return full of sadness, dulled by the tragedy I have seen’ (ibid., p. 19). Thereafter, she helped run the anarchist Strickland Press with Guy Aldred, Jenny Patrick and John Caldwell. Ethel McDonald was ‘equally at ease with a spanner, a sewing machine or a paintbrush’ (ODNB 2004). She died of multiple sclerosis. In 2006, a drama-doc film of her life, An Anarchist’s Story, was made by Mark Littlewood. sr

• Mitchell Library, Glasgow: McDonald corr. and papers. Caldwell, J. T. (1988) Come Dungeons Dark: the life and times of Guy Aldred; Dolan, C. (2009) An Anarchist’s Story: the life of Ethel Macdonald [sic]; Hodgart, R. M. (n. d., Kate Sharpley Library) Ethel MacDonald [sic]: Glasgow woman anarchist ; ODNB (2004) (see MacDonald [sic], Ethel; Aldred, Guy; Patrick, Jenny); Sunday Herald, 13 Feb. 2005. MACDONALD, Cicely (c. 1660–c. NIGHEAN MHIC RAGHNAILL

1729) see SILEAS

MACDONALD, Flora, n. MacDonald, born Milton, South Uist 1722, died Penduin, Isle of Skye 4 March 1790. Jacobite heroine. Daughter of Marion MacDonald, minister’s daughter, and Ranald MacDonald of Milton and Balivanich, tacksman. Related to her own chief and the Campbells of Argyll, Flora MacDonald’s family had high

social standing. Her father died around 1724 and her mother remarried in 1728. They remained at Milton, moving to Armadale on Skye when her eldest brother married in 1745 and took over the Milton farms. After Culloden, Prince Charles Edward Stuart was in hiding in South Uist. To secure his escape, in June 1746 Flora MacDonald visited her brother in South Uist and travelled back to Skye with the Prince disguised as her maid. Her stepfather, Hugh MacDonald, although a government officer, is assumed to have had Jacobite sympathies and to have engineered her visit, providing her with a passport to cross the Minch. *Margaret MacLeod, Lady Clanranald, supplied provisions for the crossing. Despite a £30,000 price on his head, the Prince gained freedom, but Flora MacDonald was captured on 12 July 1746 and taken by prison ship to Leith then onwards to London where she was held in a messenger’s house. Supporters raised £1,500 for her and an amnesty secured her release after a year’s imprisonment. She stayed a year in Edinburgh before returning to Skye in July 1748 to a muted reception – many Highlanders had suffered while she became rich and celebrated. She spent the next two years between London and Edinburgh, then returned to Skye to marry Allan MacDonald of Kingsburgh (1722–92) on 6 November 1750. While trying new farming methods at Kingsburgh and Flodigarry, during his work as factor for *Lady Margaret Macdonald of Sleat and her family, MacDonald lost his wife’s fortune and, having overspent his chief ’s money, was dismissed as factor in 1766. Although now struggling with increasing rents, Flora MacDonald charmed Johnson and Boswell when they visited Kingsburgh in 1773, allowing Johnson to sleep in the bed Prince Charles had occupied. Flora and Allan MacDonald had five sons and two daughters; when the family emigrated to Cheek’s Creek in Montgomery County, North Carolina in 1774, John (15) and Frances (8) were left behind. While her husband, on the British side in the American Revolution, was imprisoned from April 1776, Flora MacDonald broke her arm, contracted fevers and was looted of the silver and books she had brought from home. Allan MacDonald was paroled after eighteen months and Flora followed him to New York in April 1778, then Nova Scotia, where she spent a bitter winter and injured her good arm. In October 1779, she sailed for London where, quite ill, she stayed for six months before travelling to Edinburgh to see 261

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her son John, then to Skye to be reunited with Frances. She lived at Dunvegan Castle, where her daughter Anne was a guest. Before Allan MacDonald returned in 1785, she learned that their sons Alexander and Ranald had been lost at sea. John gave his parents an allowance in 1788 and they leased Penduin. They lived out their lives there and were buried at nearby Kilmuir. A few months before her death, Flora MacDonald dictated a description of the events of 1746, and of her time in America. EL • Douglas, H. (2003) Flora MacDonald: the most loyal rebel (Bibl.); MacDonald, A. R. (1938) The Truth about Flora MacDonald; Macleod, R. H. (1995) Flora MacDonald: the Scottish heroine in Scotland and North America; ODNB (2004). MACDONALD, Louisa, born Arbroath 10 Dec. 1858, died Marylebone, London, 28 Nov. 1949. Scholar, pioneering college principal, Australia. Daughter of Ann Kidd, and John Macdonald, WS and town clerk. The family’s 11th child, Louisa Macdonald was first educated by older sisters, a brother who taught her Latin, and a tutor. After attending a London finishing school and doing well in the Edinburgh Local examinations, she and her sister Bella matriculated at the University of London, which had recently admitted women. Louisa Macdonald graduated from University College London with firstclass honours in Classics and honours in German (1884), later acquiring an MA in Classics, while Bella graduated in medicine. After visiting the USA and her brother in Australia, Lousa Macdonald returned to a fellowship at UCL. She taught, undertook research in classical archaeology at the British Museum, travelled, and worked voluntarily on educational reform and women’s rights. This excellent preparation, rare for women at the time, gave her a strong advantage when she was selected in 1891 from 65 candidates (eight Australian) to be Foundation Principal of The Women’s College within the University of Sydney. She remained in that influential role until 1919, establishing the college’s strong academic reputation and collegiate life reminiscent of Girton and Newnham. She was assisted by her lifelong friend Dr Evelyn Dickinson, ‘new woman’, medical graduate and college honorary physician. Louisa Macdonald played a major part in Sydney life, befriending Rose Scott and Maybanke Anderson, central figures in Australian feminism, and other leading Sydney citizens. On retirement she returned to London, retaining

close ties with the college. She was both a pioneer of women’s education in Australia and a witty commentator on Sydney life, glimpsed through her letters to Eleanor Grove, former principal at College Hall, London. am • Macdonald, L. (1949) The Women’s College within the University of Sydney. ADB; Beaumont, J. and Hole, W. V. (1996) Letters from Louisa; Hole, W. V. and Treweeke, A. H. (1953) The History of The Women’s College within the University of Sydney; Mackinnon, A. (1997) Love and Freedom: professional women and the reshaping of personal life.

born Tipton, Staffordshire, 5 Nov. 1864, died London 7 Jan. 1933; MACDONALD, Frances Eliza, born Kidsgrove, Staffordshire, 24 August 1873, died Glasgow 12 Dec. 1921. Artist designers. Daughters of Frances Grove Hardeman, and John Macdonald, engineer. Margaret and Frances Macdonald moved to Glasgow with their family upon the retirement of their Glaswegian father, and enrolled in classes at the Glasgow School of Art. By 1894, they had formed an alliance with a group of students that included their future husbands, architect Charles Rennie Mackintosh and designer James Herbert McNair. Frances married McNair on 14 June 1899, Margaret married Mackintosh on 22 August 1900. Their partnerships with each other and with their husbands proved artistically successful as they collaborated on various projects. Together they became known as ‘The Glasgow Four’, their work being associated with ‘The Glasgow Style’ (see Glasgow Girls). Early work by the Macdonald sisters was nicknamed the ‘Spook School’ by hostile critics. The Studio, however, commended the metalwork jointly designed and produced by them in the 1896 Arts and Crafts Exhibition (London) for its novelty, sense of decoration and ‘break with tradition’, while at the same time noting its eccentricity (Studio 1897, p. 89). The collaboration of the four resulted in the highly acclaimed ‘rooms’ designed for the Vienna Secession (1900) and the Turin Exhibition of Modern Decorative Art (1902), including furniture, metalwork, textiles, gesso panels and paintings. After 1900, Frances Macdonald tended to focus mostly on watercolours: between 1910 and 1915, she produced a series of enigmatic paintings with titles such as Man makes the beads of life but woman must thread them (Hunterian Art Gallery, Glasgow), depicting elongated, emaciated women. Her sister, who was elected MACDONALD, Margaret,

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a member of the RSSPWC in 1898, produced equally enigmatic watercolours, with themes frequently related to flower lore (Dancer of the Rhododendrons, 1910, untraced) or mysticism (Silver Apples of the Moon, 1912, untraced, the title of which is a line from a poem by W. B. Yeats). She also made sumptuously elegant gesso panels of mysterious aspect: O Ye that Walk in Willow Wood, 1903, refers to Dante Gabriel and Christina Rossetti, and The Seven Princesses, 1909 (Vienna), refers to Maeterlinck’s play of that name. These panels, as well as her equally accomplished and elegant The May Queen, 1900 (Glasgow Museums), were made for interior spaces designed by Mackintosh and, in the case of May Queen and Willow Wood, graced the walls of *Kate Cranston’s popular Glasgow tea-rooms. Frances Macdonald had lived in Liverpool following her marriage to James McNair, but in 1908 the couple, who had one son, returned to Glasgow, where she taught at the GSA for a year or two. She seems to have ceased producing art by 1916, and her early death at 48 remains, like many of her pictures, shrouded in mystery. Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh moved south during the war, and she and her husband lived on and off in France during the 1920s: he died in 1928. She retained her Chelsea studio and died there in 1933. Only in recent years has the striking contribution of the Macdonald sisters to the Glasgow Style been fully recognised. jvh • J. Burkhauser, J. (ed.) (1990) Glasgow Girls ; Cumming, E. (ed.) (1992) Glasgow 1900 Art & Design, (2006) Hand, Heart and Soul: the Arts and Crafts Movement in Scotland; Helland, J. (1993) ‘Frances Macdonald: the self as fin-desiècle woman’, Woman’s Art Journal, 14, 1, (1994) ‘The critics and the arts and crafts: the instance of Margaret Macdonald and Charles Rennie Mackintosh’, Art History, 17, 2, (1996) The Studios of Frances and Margaret Macdonald, (2001) ‘A sense of extravagance: Margaret Macdonald’s gesso panels, 1900–3’, Visual Culture in Britain, 2, 1; MSW; *ODNB (2004); Robertson, P. (1983) Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh ; White, G. (1897) ‘Some Glasgow designers and their work (Part 1)’, Studio. MACDONALD, Margaret, of Sleat, n. Montgomerie, born Eglinton c. 1716, died 30 March 1799. Estate manager. Daughter of Susanna Kennedy of Culzean, and Alexander, 9th Earl of Eglinton. Lady Margaret Montgomerie married Sir Alexander Macdonald of Sleat on Skye, whose family was of Jacobite inclination, on 24 April 1739. During the uprising, she was reputed to have

helped Prince Charles Edward Stewart escape when *Flora MacDonald brought him to her house, and acted bravely to protect her property and avoid confiscation. Widowed in 1747, she successfully took on the responsibility for running the estate and raising several children. In 1752, before the departure of her two elder sons, James and Alexander, for an English education, she commissioned the Edinburgh artist William Mosman to paint a double portrait, known as The Macdonald Boys. This charming tartan extravaganza showing one boy holding a golf club and the other a shotgun, set against the Skye landscape, is commonly reproduced on shortbread tins and ‘Highland’ products today. The untimely death in 1766 of her adored eldest son James, a promising classical scholar, caused Lady Margaret to erect a monument to his memory on Skye. Boswell’s and Johnson’s visit in 1773 inspired melancholy speculation on the death of a genius and the grief of a mother and clan. sn • Boswell, J. [1773] (1936) Boswell’s Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides with Samuel Johnson; Douglas, H. (1993) Flora MacDonald: the most loyal rebel. SNPG, The Macdonald Boys. MACDONALD, Margo Symington, n. Aitken, m1 MacDonald, m2 Sillars, born Hamilton 19 April

1943, died Edinburgh 4 April 2014. Teacher, politician, columnist, broadcaster, Right to Die activist. Daughter of Jean Aitken, nurse, and Robert Aitken, coalminer. After Hamilton Academy, Margo Aitken trained as a PE teacher in Dunfermline, marrying her first husband, Peter MacDonald, in 1965 and helping him run a Blantyre pub. They had two daughters, but later divorced. In the 1973 byelection, when Margo MacDonald was elected to Westminster as the SNP candidate and ‘blonde bombshell’ who unexpectedly blew apart the Labour stronghold of Glasgow Govan, she became one of the best-known Scottish politicians of her generation – certainly the most widely recognised. Despite holding the seat for only four months, she was rarely out of the news thereafter. She ­disliked the tabloid trivialisation of her glamorous looks and bar-room experience, but supporters and opponents soon learned that her warm, wise-­ cracking style was underpinned by sharp political intelligence and exceptional communications skills. These leadership qualities were harnessed by the SNP between 1974 and 1979, when she was

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deputy leader of the party as it advanced to a high point of Westminster representation with 11 MPs. However, Margo MacDonald was committed to steering the party leftwards; when the parliamentary group voted with the Conservatives to bring down the Labour government in 1979, her maverick spirit asserted itself through the left-leaning 79 Group that she helped to form. When it was prohibited, three years later, she resigned from the party. Although she rejoined in the 1990s and served as MSP for Lothian in the new Scottish Parliament for 15 years, latterly as an Independent, she never sacrificed her principles to ambition, and never recovered her influence within the party hierarchy. Her second husband, Jim Sillars, was another charismatic left-wing nationalist politician, who recovered her old seat of Glasgow Govan in another by-election. His wife, meanwhile, threw all her parliamentary energy and compassionate nature into driving legislative change in controversial, morally complex areas. She championed a progressive approach to the trade and conditions of sex workers, but her final campaign was more personally argued. Her own experience of Parkinson’s disease and contacts among the terminally ill inspired her Assisted Suicide (Scotland) Bill. It was before Holyrood at the time of her death, but was defeated. JWD • The Guardian, 5 April 2014 (obit.); The Herald, 4 April 2014, archive interview: ‘Margo MacDonald’s crusade to die with dignity’; The Scotsman, 4 April 2014 (obit.).

n. MacDougall, born Ardtun, Isle of Mull, 1789, died Ardtun 21 May 1872. Gaelic poet and hymn writer. Daughter of Anne Morrison, and Duncan MacDougall, farmer. Mary MacDougall married crofter Neil Macdonald. Her best-known poem is probably ‘Leanabh an aigh’, verses of which were roughly translated as ‘Child in the manger’ by Lachlan MacBean for his Songs and Hymns of the Scottish Highlands (1888) and set to the Highland melody called in hymn books ‘Bunessan’, after the village near Ardtun. The translation was included with this tune in the Revised Church Hymnary of 1927, and in many books since, though without the pungent second verse, contrasting the Christ child with the children of earthly kings (‘Monarchs have tender, delicate children/Nourished in splendour, proud and gay . . . But the most holy Child of salvation/Gently and lowly lived below’). A devout Baptist, Mary Macdonald wrote hymns and

MACDONALD, Mary,

poems which she sang at her spinning wheel: one, a satirical poem on tobacco, was written because she thought her husband smoked too much. In many hymn books her dates are wrongly listed as 1817–1890. jrw • Anon. (1999) Companion to Rejoice and Sing ; CDH; Milgate, W. (1982) Songs of the People of God.

n. Buchan-Hepburn, born East Linton 27 Sept. 1838, died Logan 15 March 1926. Gardener and plant collector. Daughter of Helen Little, and Sir Thomas Buchan-Hepburn. The second of five children, Agnes BuchanHepburn was born into a family of keen gardeners and plant collectors. During her childhood at Smeaton Hepburn, East Linton, her father expanded the woodlands, planting new conifers discovered by Scottish plant hunters such as David Douglas and Robert Fortune. When she married James McDouall, landowner, in 1869, she moved to his ancient family estate at Logan, near Stranraer, taking her own collection of roses, lilies and shrubs, as well as important connections with plant hunters. Although the plant collection at Logan was later to become famous under her sons, Kenneth and Douglas, Agnes McDouall was their inspiration and she was the first to exploit the garden’s potential for growing tender exotic plants. She is credited with starting the collection of Southern Hemisphere species by planting Logan’s first eucalyptus tree, Eucalyptus urnigera, beneath the ruin of Castle Balzieland in the walled garden. The walled garden, now Logan Botanic Garden, became part of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh in 1969. Agnes McDouall’s tree was cut down in 1994 when it became unsafe. She is buried in Kirkmaiden Churchyard near Drummore. fy

MCDOUALL, Agnes,

• Affleck, D. (2000) ‘Smeaton Hepburn Gardens, East Linton’, Caledonian Gardener, RCHS, pp. 56–7; Bennell, A. (2003) Logan Botanic Garden, Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh; (1987) An Inventory of Gardens and Designed Landscapes, vol. 5; Smith, W. Wright (1945) ‘Obituary Kenneth McDouall’, The Gardeners’ Chronicle, p. 34; Williamson, D. (1901) ‘Logan Gardens, Wigtonshire’, The Gardeners’ Chronicle, p. 126. MCDOUGALL, Lily Martha Maud, born Glasgow 25 July 1875, died Edinburgh 21 Dec. 1958. Artist and hostess. Daughter of Matilda Milne, and William Henrie McDougall, banker. Lily McDougall grew up in Glasgow and Bonnyrigg, Midlothian. She studied at the Royal Institution, Edinburgh and at The Hague

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School of Art, Antwerp. In 1904, she entered the Carrière Academy, Paris and worked in the studio of Jacques-Emile Blanche under Lucien Simon. Returning to Edinburgh, she joined the many women in Scotland striving to become accepted as professional artists in a male-dominated sphere. Exceptionally, her father supported her by founding in 1924 the SSWA, which enabled women in Scotland to exhibit their work. She became a regular exhibitor and, by 1914, she had a studio at 45 Frederick Street, Edinburgh. In 1923 an adjacent studio was rented by William MacTaggart, William Crozier, and later William Gillies. A generation older than these rising artists, she was an influential figure who offered them encouragement and support. The impact of her own painting, especially portraits and flower subjects which were full of panache and relied on rich impasto and dense colours, was acknowledged by Gillies. In 1940, she and her younger sister, Rose, a violinist, moved to Eskbank, near Dalkeith. Thereafter the sisters became famous for their tea parties and dinners for artists, musicians, actors and writers, which became part of the Edinburgh social calendar. In 1955, the Scottish Gallery celebrated Lily McDougall’s 80th birthday with a one-woman show, and a memorial exhibition was held there in 1959 after her death. j o s • RSA archives: typescript list, works available for exhibition 1955. Carolan, A. (ed.) (1999) Review, 75 Years of Visual Arts Scotland; Memorial Exhibition of Paintings by the late Lily M. M. McDougall (1875–1958), 2–14 March 1959, Scottish Gallery (catalogue); The Scotsman, 23 Dec. 1958 (obit.); Soden, J. and Keller, V. (1998) William Gillies. MACDOUGALL of MacDougall, Margaret Hope Garnons, born Athlone, Ireland 21 Jan. 1913, died

Oban 22 Dec. 1998. Historian and collector. Daughter of Colina MacDougall, and Alexander James MacDougall, Chief of the Clan MacDougall. Hope MacDougall was the youngest of three sisters brought up at the clan seat, Dunollie, Oban, Argyll. All three made significant contributions to preserving its 800-year-old heritage, but Hope MacDougall, who created her own social history collection, is now recognised as a leading member of the group of 20th-century Scottish women collectors pioneered by her mentor *Dr Isabel Grant, founder of Am Fasgadh, later the Highland Folk Museum at Kingussie. She was educated by a governess, at a French school in Edinburgh and boarding school in

Yorkshire. During the Second World War she assisted nursing staff at Cortachy Castle, Kirriemuir, and worked on a farm, and later as a gardener for six years. She returned home on her father’s death in 1953 to care for her mother, who died in 1963. Hope MacDougall’s eldest sister, Coline Helen Elizabeth MacDougall of MacDougall (1904–90), moved into Dunollie in 1966 on becoming the first woman Chief of the Clan MacDougall, and took a keen interest in historic family dress and textiles. At this point, Hope MacDougall moved to nearby Ganavan House, where she began to collect systematically. Over the next thirty-five years she established the MacDougall Collection, a museum collection of national significance, backed by a large archive of photographs and documents. It is held at Dunollie House, Oban, and covers the working and domestic lives of the people of the Highlands and Islands, with comparative material from elsewhere and important sub-groups such as treen (decorative wooden objects) and wooden spoons. Hope MacDougall also had a keen sense of Highland lineage: she preserved many items from life in the ‘big house’ and became clan historian. Her Kerrera: mirror of history (reprinted 2004) is the definitive book on a clan land gifted by her direct ancestor, Somerled. A notable local figure, she was renowned for clearing old shops as they closed, for beachcombing, midden-searching, and befriending local people on her collecting tours from Arran to Shetland. She was also a birdwatcher and a keen dawn bather, all year round and well into her 70s. She lived a frugal life, grinding flour on a quernstone and weaving her own MacDougall tartan. She made only three trips abroad: two to Palestine and one to the Faroes. The middle sister, Jean Louisa Morag Hadfield (1910–99), was an expert on natural textile dyes, and also focused on the important archive of MacDougall papers. She researched the correspondence of Clan MacDougall chiefs between 1715 and 1864, following the discovery of bundles of letters in the attic, and published Highland Postbag in 1984 (reprinted 2003). While Hope MacDougall was the leading academic, collector and historian, the three sisters were collectively responsible for preserving the outstanding heritage now accessible at Dunollie following its opening to the public in 2012. CG • MacDougall Collection archive and Clan MacDougall archive, Dunollie House, Oban, Argyll.

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MACFARLANE Hadfield, J. L. M. and MacDougall, M. H. G., Works as above. Private information (Madam MacDougall of MacDougall, 31st Chief of the Clan MacDougall); www.dunollie.org.uk MACFARLANE, Helen, [Howard Morton], m1 Proust, m2 Edwards, born Barrhead 25 Dec. 1818, died

Baddiley, near Nantwich, 29 Mar. 1860. Radical journalist, first translator of The Communist Manifesto. Daughter of Helen Stenhouse, and George Macfarlane, owner of calico-printing mills. The youngest of eleven, Helen Macfarlane learnt German because family members studied the chemistry of dyeing in Giessen. In 1842, when her father’s mills succumbed to competition and the family was ruined, she sought employment as a governess, and was an appalled eye-witness of the ruthless repression following the Vienna uprising of March 1848. In 1850, she returned to Britain, first to Burnley, then London. The explicit socialism adopted by some Chartist leaders was akin to her own vision of a society to be achieved by revolution, in which everybody would enjoy equal political and social rights regardless of class, race or gender. Her socialism was suffused with a Christianity in which Jesus figured as a prototypical proletarian. It was also influenced by Marx, Engels and Hegel, testifying to her wide reading in French and German philosophy. She was among the first to publicise these writers in English, inserting translated passages into the articles she wrote for Chartist George Julian Harney’s monthly Democratic Review and his weekly Red Republican (Friend of the People from December 1850), until June 1850 under her own name, subsequently as ‘Howard Morton’. Marx and Engels, who knew her personally, commissioned her to produce the first English translation of their Communist Manifesto, serialised in Harney’s Red Republican in November 1850. (Her version begins: ’A frightful hobgoblin stalks throughout Europe’.) Her own articles ended after she was insulted by Harney’s wife, Mary Cameron, at the 1850 New Year’s Eve party of the internationalist Fraternal Democrats. This was deplored by Marx, who considered her ‘the only ­collaborator on [Harney’s] spouting rag who had original ideas – a rare bird, on his paper’ (Black 2004, p. 118). In April 1851, ‘Howard Morton’ donated money for revolutionary Polish and Hungarian refugees facing deportation. In 1852, Helen Macfarlane married Francis Proust, a revolutionary exile from Belgium, and in 1853, they sailed for

South Africa, to join her brothers. Following the deaths of both her husband and her baby daughter, she returned to England, and in 1856 married John W. Edwards, a widowed vicar, living at Baddiley, outside Nantwich. They had two sons, but in 1860 she died of bronchitis and was buried in the local churchyard. JS • Macfarlane, H., Work as above and see Black (2004) (Bibl.), Black (2014). Anon. (1975) ‘Helen Macfarlane, chartist and marxist’, Quarterly Bulletin of Marx Memorial Library, 74; Black, D. (2004) Helen Macfarlane: a feminist, revolutionary journalist and philosopher in mid-19th-century England (Bibl.); Black, D. (2014) (ed.) Helen Macfarlane: Red Republican. Essays, articles and her translation of the Communist Manifesto; Schoyen, A. R. (1958) The Chartist Challenge: a portrait of George Julian Harney; Schwarzkopf, J. (1991) Women in the Chartist Movement; Yeoman, L. ’Helen Macfarlane – the radical feminist inspired by Karl Marx’ at http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/ uk-scotland-20475989

m. Brodie, born Edinburgh 20 Jan. 1843, died Edinburgh 18 August 1871. Itinerant preacher. Daughter of Mary Maxwell Turner, and Archibald McFarlane, clothier. Jessie Macfarlane grew up in a Presbyterian household. In 1859, at the beginning of a period of evangelical revival, she heard the influential lay preacher Brownlow North. She attended revival meetings throughout 1860 and converted late that year. In 1861 she began extemporary preaching to women’s meetings and missions around Scotland. Although unusual, it was considered acceptable in revivalist circles for women to engage in public preaching to other women. Jessie Macfarlane’s ministry entered a new and controversial phase when she began to admit men to her meetings, challenging conventions that respectable women played no public role in mixed society and that women should keep silent in church. When she also undertook religious instruction of new converts and spoke to mixed Christian audiences, these traditions were further confronted. She was supported by Gordon Forlong, an Aberdeen lawyer who was a leading light in the Plymouth Brethren. He believed there was scriptural warrant for female preaching and actively promoted Jessie Macfarlane’s ministry. This view was not shared by her fiancé, who broke off their engagement. In 1864 she published a pamphlet, Scriptural Warrant for Women to Preach the Gospel, in which she claimed that the role of prophetess, mentioned in scripture, remained valid. Her emotional style of millennialist

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preaching was effective both in Scotland and, from 1866 to 1869, in major English cities. Jessie Macfarlane was only one of several itinerant female preachers working for the Brethren during the 1860s. They were mostly young, single, working-class and strong-minded. Isabella Armstrong (born 1840) began preaching in her native County Tyrone at the age of nineteen. When she came to Scotland in 1863 she was based at Newmains Assembly, preaching to hundreds every week. She was considered an ‘eloquent’ challenge to those who were antipathetic to ‘petticoat preachers’. In 1866 in a tract in defence of her ministry (A Plea for Modern Prophetesses) she argued that women are created equal with men, and that Christ has freedom in whom he chooses as the instruments of salvation. Female preachers were a distinctive feature of popular lay revivalism, and constituted a serious provocation to religious and social norms of the mid-Victorian era. They helped to contribute to changing perceptions and possibilities for women. Isabella Armstrong went on to engage in temperance and suffrage activity, but Jessie Macfarlane, who married Dr David Brodie on 31 Oct 1869, suffered ill-health and died in 1871. lo • Anderson, O. (1969) ‘Women Preachers in mid-Victorian Britain’, Historical Journal, 12; Dickson, N. (1993–5) ‘Modern prophetesses: women preachers in the 19th century Scottish Brethren’ Records of the Scottish Church History Society, 25; Lloyd, J. (2010) Women and the Shaping of British Methodism: persistent preachers 1807–1907; ODNB (2004). MCGHIE, Margaret, fl. 1760–1770s, Aberdeen. Innkeeper. The New Inn, Aberdeen, was prominently located in the Castlegate, adjoining the Tolbooth and Masonic Lodge. From June 1763, it was operated by John and Margaret McGhie and, after his death, about 1770, the Aberdeen Journal regularly identified it as ‘Mrs McGhie’s House’. It appeared even more commercially active during her tenure, benefiting from its location in Aberdeen’s commercial district. Senior members of the community regularly used it to conduct business. Alexander Carlyle, of the Edinburgh literati, described it in 1769 as, ‘a very good house – handsome rooms, very good service’ (LHPS n. d.), as did Samuel Johnson in August 1773: ‘we found a very good house and civil treatment’ (Johnson, 1924 edn., 12). When she ‘retired’ in 1776, she used her skills to keep a lodging house nearby. Operating a ‘civil’ business with a good reputation, women like Mrs

McGhie established themselves in Scotland’s commercial communities. DLS • AJ, 1758–73; Carlyle, A. (n. d.) Journal of a Tour to the North of Scotland, Local History Pamphlet Series (LHPS); Defoe, D. [1726–7] (1987) The Complete English Tradesman; Johnson, S. [1775] (1924) Journey to the Western Isles of Scotland, R. W. Chapman (ed.); Keith, A. (1972) A Thousand Years of Aberdeen.

born Edinburgh 19 June 1864, died Edinburgh 20 August 1913. Artist, illustrator. Daughter of Isabella Clarke, and Rev. Robert William MacGoun of Greenock. The sixth of eight children and profoundly deaf from birth, Hannah MacGoun followed her sister Janet to Edinburgh Trustees’ Academy (1887–92) where tutor Robert McGregor guided her interest in painters of the Dutch and Barbizon schools. ‘Highly Commended’ in her final year, she travelled to Germany and Holland, meeting Bernardus Blommers and Josef Israels. The Church of Scotland Magazine Life & Work gave Hannah MacGoun her earliest commission, illustrating poems by her father (1894). More work followed, for publishers Oliphant Anderson & Ferrier (1896) and T. N. Foulis (1905–13). Harriet Warrack used her drawings for an anthology of poems, and she illustrated many children’s books (full list in DSAA, p. 359). John Hogben (1914, pp. 12–13) referred to her as ‘the Scottish Kate Greenaway’ and Sir James Caw noted her ability to paint children, although she also produced many images of elderly people and of the Scottish clergy, in the social realist vein of Herkomer. She exhibited at the Scottish National Exhibition (1908), the RGIFA (1898–1914) and the SSA (1909–13). Her portraits of children from the Nelson, Haldane and Morison families appear in catalogues for the RSA (1885–1914). ra

MACGOUN, Hannah Clarke Preston,

• Addison, R. (2000) ‘Spirited activity: Scottish book design and women illustrators, 1890–1920’, Jour. Scot. Soc. Art History, 5, pp. 59–68, (2004) ‘Women in book illustration in Edinburgh 1886–1945’, PhD, ECA; DSAA; Elphick, I. and Harris, P. (2000) T. N. Foulis; Helland, J. (2000) Professional Women Painters in Nineteenth-century Scotland; Hogben, J. (1914) ‘Hannah McGoun’, Life & Work, Jan. 1914, pp. 12–13 (obit.). MACGREGOR, Janet Elizabeth (Betty), MD, FRCPath, OBE, n. McPherson, born Glasgow 12 Jan. 1920,

died Lynn of Lorne 8 Oct. 2005. Doctor and cytologist. Daughter of Jean (Jennie) Craig, and Andrew McPherson, company secretary.

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Betty Macgregor started her career in Aberdeen as a research assistant to a gynaecologist, Professor Sir Dugald Baird. She was awarded an MD in 1963 on the potential of cervical cancer screening, which was not available in the UK at the time. She saw an important clinical need: women were suffering and dying from cervical cancer in their 40s and 50s, an essentially preventable disease. She emphasised three aspects of screening: encouraging women to be screened; quality-control of the laboratory test; and publishing the results. For her the Aberdeen programme worked because women knew that it did and were happy to attend for their smears and have treatment if necessary. She initiated and maintained the first, and at the time almost the only, successful cervical screening programme in the UK. There was debate and even scepticism elsewhere in the UK during the 1960s and 70s, several decades before cervical screening, pioneered by the British Society for Clinical Cytology (BSCC), became effectively organised nationwide as the NHS Cervical Screening Programme. She was Vice-Chairman, Chairman and President of the BSCC from 1974 to 1983 and was awarded fellowship of the Royal College of Pathologists in 1982 and an OBE in 1983. Having a successful medical career as well as bringing up a family of four children was unusual in the 1940s and 1950s. Betty McPherson married Dr Alastair Macgregor while they were medical students in Glasgow during the Second World War and moved to Aberdeen when he was appointed Professor of Medicine. Her rewarding life resulted from her rounded approach to both her private life, as a caring wife, mother, grandmother and great grandmother, and her medical career, combining clinical, laboratory and epidemiological aspects of a subject to which she was wholeheartedly dedicated. Although she travelled widely, presenting her results nationally and internationally, she always loved Scotland, particularly Lynn of Lorne where she spent her final days. AH e • Macgregor, J. E. and Baird, D. (1963) ‘Detection of cervical cancer carcinoma in the general population’, BMJ 1, pp. 1631–6; Macgregor, J. E., Moss, S. M., Parkin, D. M., and Day, N. E. (1985) ‘A case-control study of cervical cancer screening in north-east Scotland’, BMJ 290, pp. 1543–6; Macgregor, J. E., Campbell, M. K., Mann, E. M. F. and Swanson, K. Y. (1994) ‘Screening for cervical intraepithelial neoplasia in north-east Scotland shows fall in incidence and mortality from invasive cancer with concomitant rise in preinvasive disease’, BMJ, 308, pp. 1407–11.

(1960) ‘Setting a whale to catch a sprat’ (Editorial) Lancet, 276, pp. 1239–40; *eODNB; Way, S. (1967) ‘Cytological service and the ministry’ (letter), BMJ, 1, pp. 296–7. MACGREGOR, Margaret Ann Kinniburgh, n. Burns, baptised Edinburgh 11 Nov. 1838, died Glasgow 20 Jan. 1901. Bible Woman and Lady Mission Superintendent. Daughter of Jeanie Marshall, and James Burns, clerk. Margaret Burns attended Moray House School in Edinburgh. She belonged to Lothian Road United Presbyterian Church, but experienced an evangelical conversion during the Revival that swept Scotland 1859–61. After marriage, she and her husband Thomas Macgregor moved to Govan and joined St Mary’s Free Church. She was soon involved in the church’s Sabbath School and outreach work. In 1869, she began holding meetings for local mothers in her home and visiting the sick. Her work grew as she ran evangelical, gospel, and kitchen meetings and Bible classes for young men and women. She moved to new premises in Harmony Row in 1883, just before her husband’s death, her work now funded by *Isabella Elder. As Lady Superintendent for Fairfield Works Mission, Margaret Macgregor took responsibility for a panoply of initiatives. Sewing and kitchen meetings were key elements in the mission strategy – offering women skills, materials and company in carrying out traditional domestic duties, in an atmosphere of Bible studies, ‘improving’ readings and prayer. The mission was run on non-denominational lines, seeking co-operation with local Protestant congregations. A nursery offered childcare for women mill-workers and widowers. Margaret Macgregor made great personal efforts to enable numerous women and children to enjoy a summer holiday in the country. Her gifts as an orator and expounder of Scripture were widely acknowledged, and her organisational resourcefulness, combined with her faith and compassion, endeared her to the community. She persistently struggled, against the odds, to provide quality of life in the midst of poverty. Trusting in a loving God herself, she tried to embody that love in her ministry. Margaret Macgregor typified the increasing reliance of Victorian evangelical Protestantism on the labours of women. lo

• Ferguson, J. (1904) Set Apart: being the life-work of Margaret A. Macgregor, Superintendent of the Fairfield Works Mission; Orr, L. et al. (2008) Celebrating Margaret Macgregor; Thomson, D. P. (c. 1975) Women of the Scottish Church.

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MCINNES MCIAN, Frances Matilda (Fanny), n. Whitaker, m1 McIan, m2 Unwin, born Bath c. 1814, died London

7 April 1897. Artist, painter of Highland scenes. Daughter of Sarah Hawkins, upholsterer, and William Whitaker, cabinetmaker. Fanny Whitaker’s early education is unclear, but she eloped to Bristol in 1831 with Robert McIan (1803–56), an actor from Inverness-shire (stage name, ‘Robert Jones’). Swept off her feet by this Scottish Highlander, she identified with his dramatic initiatives. In London, he joined the Highland Society, while she worked as an art tutor and illustrator. Both painted and exhibited together, romantic Jacobite subjects being a significant element in their repertoire. Fanny McIan’s Highland Refugees from the ’45 (1845) became a popular print. Other paintings, Soldiers’ wives awaiting the results of the Battle of Prestonpans (1849) and Highland Emigration (1852), reflected some of the common emotional experience of Highland families. As Head of the Female School at London’s Government School of Design (1842–57), Fanny McIan was respected for her professional expertise. She was elected honorary associate of the RSA (1854), only the second woman to achieve this distinction. Meanwhile, Robert McIan produced illustrated books, Clans of the Scottish Highlands (1845, 1847) and Picturesque Gatherings of the Scottish Highlanders (1848). After his death, Fanny McIan remarried in 1858, acquiring property in Argyll on the death of her second husband, Richard Unwin (1820–64). Although she was not Scottish-born, her association with Highland subjects was firmly fixed in the public mind. ra • RSA catalogues (1840s). Morse, B. (2001) A Woman of Design, a Man of Passion; ODNB (2004). Private information.

DBE, born Lavin House, Co. Antrim, c. 1875, died Girvan, Ayrshire, 8 Feb. 1968. Obstetrician, gynaecologist. Daughter of James McIlroy, GP, and his wife. Louise McIlroy was one of the first female Glasgow medical students, graduating MBChB from the all-women Queen Margaret College in 1898, and studying in London, Vienna and Berlin. Her career was a series of firsts: the first woman MD (1900, commended) from the University of Glasgow and first female resident at Glasgow Royal Infirmary (1899); by 1910 she had served as house surgeon at the Glasgow Samaritan Hospital and gynaecologist at the Victoria Infirmary. The first MCILROY, Anne Louise,

woman senior assistant to the Muirhead Professor of Obstetrics at the University of Glasgow, she also obtained the LM Dublin in 1901 and the DSc from Glasgow in 1910 and London in 1934. During the First World War, Louise McIlroy was Médecin Chef at the *Scottish Women’s Hospital, Troyes, France, and then in Salonika and Serbia (see Scottish Women’s Hospitals). A natural leader, showing great ‘steadiness of purpose’ (Leneman 1994, p.178), she held out against interference from influential outsiders, fought off illness and pioneered several initiatives. She always wore a thistle badge on her French army cap. She ended the war as a surgeon with the RAMC in Constantinople, receiving the Croix de Guerre and two Serbian medals. Louise McIlroy spent the rest of her career chiefly in London as consultant and Professor of Obstetrics and Gynaecology at the Royal Free Hospital, while holding posts at Bermondsey and the Marie Curie Hospital for Women. She published more than 20 research ­articles and wrote a textbook on pregnancy. During the Second World War, now well into her 60s, she served as gynaecological surgeon in Slough and as obstetric war consultant for Buckinghamshire. Created DBE in 1929, she was appointed to the BMA General Council and to fellowships of the Royal College of Physicians, England (1923) and the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (1929). She had honorary degrees from Glasgow and Belfast, and among other administrative roles was vice-president in 1912 of the Glasgow Obstetrical and Gynaecological Society and secretary of the Glasgow and West of Scotland Association of Registered Medical Women (founded 1904). Sharp-minded, with ‘a ready wit’ (ibid., p.30), she worked until the age of 70, retiring to Turnberry, Ayrshire. jlmj • McIlroy, A. L. (1924) From a Balcony on the Bosphorus, (1936) The Toxaemias of Pregnancy. Alexander, W. (1987) First Ladies of Medicine ; BMJ, 17 Feb. 1968, 1(589), p. 451; Jenkinson, J. (1993) Scottish Medical Societies 1731–1939; Leneman, L. (1994) In the Service of Life ; ODNB (2004); www.scottishwomenshospitals.co.uk. MCINNES (or MACINNES), Helen Clark, m. Highet, born Glasgow 7 Oct. 1907, died New York, USA, 30 Sept. 1985. Novelist. Daughter of Jessie McDiarmid, and Donald McInnes, joiner. Helen McInnes and her brother were brought up in Helensburgh, where she attended Hermitage School. She graduated MA in French and German at the University of Glasgow in 1928. After working

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with Dumbarton County Libraries, she gained a diploma in librarianship at University College London in 1931. At the University of Glasgow – anecdotally, in her first week there – she met classical scholar Gilbert Highet (1906–78), whom she married on 22 September 1932. Moving to Oxford where he held a fellowship, they worked together on translations and spent their summers travelling in Europe. They had one son. In 1937, they moved to New York, where Gilbert Highet was professor of Latin and Greek at Columbia University. They became American citizens in 1952. In 1973, both received the Wallace Award of the American Scottish Foundation, awarded to Americans of Scottish descent distinguished in fields including education and literature. She published 21 espionage thrillers under the name Helen MacInnes. Her first novel, Above Suspicion (1941), drew on her observations of the growing Nazi movement during the 1930s, particularly on her honeymoon in Bavaria. Assignment in Brittany (1942) is said to have been used to train Allied personnel to work with the French underground, and The Unconquerable (1944) was such a convincing portrayal of the Polish resistance that she was called to Washington to reveal her sources. Though her husband served as a British intelligence officer in the Second World War, she denied having access to inside information, claiming that she based most of her stories on newspaper reports. She supplemented this with extensive travel in Europe and her novels are noted for their accurate depiction of the history, culture and social conditions of the areas in which they are set. They have been criticised as formulaic (two more experimental mainstream novels were poorly received by critics) but her choice of theme arises from a lifelong concern, dating from her reading of George Orwell, about totalitarian regimes. marb • Princeton Univ. Library, Princeton, NJ, USA: Archive; Univ. of Glasgow Archives. MacInnes, H., Works as above and see HSWW (Bibl.). DLB Gale, 87, pp. 284–94; HSWW (Bibl.); ODNB (2004); The Times, 2 Oct. 1985 (obit.).

n. Scott, FRSE, born Edinburgh 23 April 1910, died Cincinatti, Ohio, 21 March 1960. Mathematician. Daughter of Helen Myers Meldrum, and James Alexander Scott, science teacher. Sheila Scott attended Trinity Academy and The Edinburgh Ladies’ College before taking her MA in mathematics and natural philosophy (University

MACINTYRE, Sheila,

of Edinburgh, 1932). She moved to Girton College, Cambridge, and carried out research with Mary Cartwright, leading to the paper ‘On the asymptotic periods of integral functions’ in the Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society (1933). Having returned to Scotland in 1934 and taught at several schools, including St Leonards, St Andrews, she married mathematician Archibald James Macintyre in 1940 and was appointed assistant lecturer at the University of Aberdeen where her husband also taught. There she completed her PhD, supervised by Edward M. Wright, on ‘Some problems in interpolatory function theory’ (1947). Between 1947 and 1958 she published another ten papers while bringing up her two children, and became FRSE in 1958. Sheila Macintyre also prepared a German-English mathematical dictionary and was an active member of the EMS and the MAs. In 1958, she and her husband accepted visiting research professorships at the University of Cincinnati, where she taught until her early death from cancer. Considered a brilliant original mathematician, she was remembered too as a superb teacher and helpful colleague, whose clarity of mind made her an exceptionally able lecturer. ls • Cartwright, M. L. (1961) ‘Sheila Scott Macintyre’, Jour. of the London Math. Soc., 36, pp. 254–6; Cossar, J. (1960–1) ‘Sheila Scott Macintyre’, Proc. of the Edin. Math. Soc., 12, p. 112; Fasanelli, F. D. (1987) ‘Sheila Scott Macintyre’, in Campbell, P. and Grinstein, L. (eds) Women of Mathematics, pp. 140–3; Wright, E. M. (1961) ‘Sheila Scott Macintyre’, Year Book of the RSE, pp. 21–3. MCIVER, Margaret (Maggie) (‘The Barras Queen’), n. Russell, born Bridgeton, Glasgow, 9 May 1879,

died Cambuslang 31 May 1958. Entrepreneur, founder of the Glasgow ‘Barras’ market and Barrowland Ballroom. Daughter of Margaret Hutcheson, French polisher, and Alexander Russell, policeman. Maggie Russell began her working life as a French polisher, like her mother, but is said to have had her first taste of business aged 12 when she was asked to look after a family friend’s fruit barrow in Parkhead, in the East End of Glasgow. She later opened a small fruit shop in Bridgeton, also in Glasgow’s East End, and met her future husband and business partner, James McIver, at the local fruit market. In the early 1920s, they started up a small business in the Calton district of Glasgow, hiring out horses and carts to local hawkers (mainly women) on a daily basis. After the First World War there was an increased volume of traffic on 270

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city thoroughfares and renewed attempts by the Corporation to discourage street trading. The McIvers began organising Saturday markets on land they acquired on the site of the present Barras and the market grew quickly to become one of Glasgow’s most famous institutions. It soon had more than 300 barrows. The original market was covered in 1926, as Maggie McIver was concerned for the welfare of the hawkers and customers in poor weather. When her husband died, of malaria contracted during the war, Maggie McIver, left to raise nine children, had to think up new ways of raising income – a ballroom was the solution. Every year, she had treated her stallholders and their families to a Christmas meal, drink and dance in the local St Mungo’s Hall. Finding it already booked one year, she built a ballroom above the enclosed market. It was opened on Christmas Eve, 1934, in a city and period described as ‘dancing daft’ (Herald 1955). It attracted many big bands and during the Second World War was popular with American servicemen, who introduced the jive and the jitterbug to the city. The sign over the door, of a man pushing a barrow, became such a landmark that it was referred to in a German propaganda broadcast by ‘Lord Haw-Haw’ (William Joyce), and was removed. In June 1958, Maggie McIver, by now a multi-millionaire, died, and in September that year, the ballroom was destroyed by fire. The Barras business remains in her family, and the market, which continues to be dominated by female stallholders, operates every Saturday and Sunday, attracting huge crowds. The rebuilt ballroom is one of the city’s premier rock concert venues. ygb • Glasgow Herald, 25 Jan. 1955;The Herald, 13 Aug. 1999; HHGW; Sunday Herald, 12 April 2001. The Glasgow Story – culture and leisure: www.theglasgowstory.com The History of the Barras Market: www.glasgowbarrowland. com/market/history.htm

born Falkirk 7 June 1963, died Glasgow 5 March 2014. Feminist economist. Daughter of Beth Fraser, nurse, and Roy McKay, engineer. Ailsa McKay attended Comely Park and Falkirk High schools, leaving to work at the local DSS before taking a first-class degree in politics and economics at Stirling University. A PhD at Nottingham followed. She married fellow economist Jim Campbell and they had two children. Publicly funded childcare, social security reform, and how a Citizen’s Basic Income could support

MCKAY, Ailsa,‡

women’s economic independence were among her priority interests and central to the challenges she made to politicians and policy-makers to make public policy and resources work for women. A founding member of the Scottish Women’s Budget Group in 1999, Ailsa McKay maintained the pressure for gender analysis in the Scottish Budget process, as adviser to the Scottish Parliament Equal Opportunities Committee, and through the Scottish Government Equality and Budgets Advisory Group. A favourite teacher and professor of economics at Glasgow Caledonian University, she held several advisory positions, including on the Expert Group on Welfare and Constitutional Reform. She published widely from her feminist economics perspective, on social security, modern apprenticeships, and the impact of austerity and welfare reform. Her final publications included the influential Counting on Marilyn Waring: new advances in feminist economics, co-edited with Margunn Bjørnholt (2014). Her important legacy is analysed in Jim Campbell and Morag Gillespie (eds) Feminist Economics and Public Policy: reflections on the work and impact of Ailsa McKay (2016). A ‘disruptive force for good’ (Scotsman, 6 March 2014), Ailsa McKay made a remarkable impact in Scottish political life through her academic activism, analysis and wickedly warm wit. AO’H • Works as above. Falkirk Herald, 22 March 2014, The Herald, 21 March 2014, The Scotsman, 11 March 2014 (obits). Personal knowledge. MCKAY or MACKAY, Anne, n. MacLeod, born Skye, fl. 1740s–50s. Anne McKay lived in Inverness with her children. After the defeat of the Jacobite army at Culloden in April 1746, Robert Nairn, a prominent Jacobite, was imprisoned in the cellar of her house. An escape plot was hatched. Anne McKay took in clothes and food for the journey and decoyed the guard. When the escape was discovered, the sentry was flogged and she was interrogated and made to stand upright for three days and nights with no food or drink. She refused to reveal anything. Anne McKay was sentenced to be whipped through the town but intervention by some prominent Inverness citizens prevented this. Her 17-year-old son was so badly beaten by Redcoat soldiers that he died from his injuries. Robert Nairn’s family honoured their debt to Anne McKay by supporting her and her family as they grew up. MEC

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Raised in Tongue House, 18-year-old Janet Mackay finished her education in Edinburgh where she met Colin Campbell of Glenure, a man in his 40s with four illegitimate daughters. In February 1749 he was made government factor on a forfeited Jacobite estate; in May 1749 the couple married and settled at Glenure House. They had two daughters. Janet Mackay was pregnant when Colin Campbell was killed in Appin in 1752, a murder made famous in R. L. Stevenson’s Kidnapped. After the murder, Janet Mackay returned to her family home to await the birth of her child; a son would inherit the estate. To her great disappointment, the child born was a girl and Glenure passed to her brother-in-law Duncan Campbell. Janet Mackay secretly married her sister’s stepson, Charles Baillie, younger of Rosehall. Her father turned her out, and the couple spent several years in Yorkshire before returning north in 1756 to be with her children. Duncan Campbell was slow to provide for the upkeep and education of her daughters. Her father took up her cause, causing a rift between the Mackay and Campbell families. Charles Baillie was killed in Louisbourg, New France, in 1758. Janet Mackay moved to Edinburgh where she married a merchant, Alexander Hart. Her eldest surviving daughter, Louisa, succeeded to Bighouse. mb-j

• Craig, M. (1997) Damn’ Rebel Bitches: the women of the ’45; Forbes, Bishop R. (1895) The Lyon in Mourning.

born Scourie c. 1615, died c. 1690. Poet. Daughter of Ann Corbett of Arkboll, and Hugh MacKay of Scourie. The second wife of a Highland chieftain, John MacKay, 2nd Lord Reay (c. 1612–80), son of *Barbara Mackenzie, Barbara MacKay, like her father and her husband, was a staunch Royalist and an early proponent of Presbyterianism in Strathnaver. When her husband was imprisoned in 1649 for fighting under Montrose, Barbara pleaded his cause with Oliver Cromwell, who promised not to pursue John if he escaped, which she then helped him to do. She went to London in 1664 to ask for Charles II’s support in an ongoing land dispute against the Gordons. Her lively household included a tutor, a harper, a piper, and a fool. When Hugh Fraser, 8th Lord Lovat, visited Lord and Lady Reay at Balnakeil House in Durness in 1669, he was entertained with activities as varied as fishing, hawking, hunting, archery, jumping, wrestling and dancing. At the end of his visit, Lord Lovat reported that Lady Reay gave him a silk plaid and trousers and a doublet, all of her own work, and the Rev. James Fraser called her ‘the prettiest, wittiest woman that ever I knew here . . . a great historian, a smart poet, and for virtue and housekeeping, few or none her parallel’ (Fraser 1905, p.450). The MacKays had at least six children. After her eldest son and heir, Donald MacKay, was killed in a gunpowder accident, Barbara MacKay helped educate her grandson, George, 3rd Lord Reay. Her principal poetry manuscript, containing ten largely religious poems, is dedicated to the Countess of Caithness. Her best known poem, ‘Anagramme on his Ma[jes] ty’, mingles religious and political ideas, encouraging Charles II to be a good king. She also wrote a eulogy to Lord Lovat (ibid., pp.509–10), who died in 1672. pbg

MACKAY, Barbara, Lady Reay,

• NRS: GD170, Campbell of Barcaldine Papers. Gibson, R. (2003) The Appin Murder in their Own Words.

born c. 1722, died Strathnaver 18 June 1814. Victim of the Sutherland Clearances. In 1814, Margaret Mackay (also incorrectly referred to as Mrs Chisholm), was living with her daughter Henrietta and son-in-law William Chisholm, a sub-tenant and tinker, at Badinloskin, an isolated holding in the midst of the common grazings of Rosal in Strathnaver. Aged over 90, she had been bedridden for some years. Her father and grandfather had been ground officers on the Sutherland estate in the parish of Farr. The tenants of Rosal agreed with Patrick Sellar, factor for the Marquess and Marchioness of Stafford (*Elizabeth Sutherland, Duchess-Countess of Sutherland) and incoming sheep farming tenant, that William Chisholm should be removed. Sellar later claimed that he was of ill repute. On 13 June 1814, the family was evicted by a party acting under Patrick Sellar’s orders. The roof was thrown down and the house set on fire, apparently while Margaret Mackay was still inside. Carried out by another daughter, Janet, and taken to a small

MACKAY, Margaret,

• NRS: GD84, Papers of the MacKay Family, Lords Reay; NLS: Adv. MS.19.3.4 ‘Anagramme on his Ma[jes]ty’; Wodrow Quarto xxvii, ff 9v–28 ‘To the Right Honourable the Countess off Caithness’. Fraser, J. [1676–c. 1699] (1905) Chronicles of the Frasers, W. MacKay, ed.; Mackay, A. (1906) The Book of MacKay; SP, 7, pp. 169–74. MACKAY, Janet, of Bighouse, c. 1731–c. 1768. Wife of murder victim. Daughter of Elizabeth Mackay, heiress of Bighouse, Sutherland, and Hugh Mackay, second son of Lord Reay.

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bothy, she died five days later. Sellar was accused of causing her death but acquitted at his trial. The event became one of the most notorious in the history of the Highland Clearances. mb-j • NRS: CS232/S/23/2 Court of Session process. Adam, R. J. (ed.) (1972) Papers on Sutherland Estate Management 1802–16; Richards, E. (1999) Patrick Sellar and the Highland Clearances.

DBE, born Camelon, Falkirk, 3 May 1948, died London 2 Jan. 2004. Campaigner. Daughter of Christina Marshall, and Hugh McKechnie, baker. Sheila McKechnie grew up in Falkirk, where her family gave her the confidence she demonstrated throughout her campaigning career. Her mother remarked that Sheila could ‘start a fight in an empty house’ (The Guardian 2004). She was the first in her family to attend university, reading ­politics and history at Edinburgh. There, she joined in the questioning of authority of the late 1960s, becoming an outspoken feminist and campaigner for student representation. After an MA in industrial relations at Warwick University and research at Oxford (where she was a board member of the radical feminist publication Red Rag), she worked with trades unions until 1985, when she joined Shelter, the campaigning organisation for housing those who are homeless. Under her guidance as director, Shelter restructured, heightened its campaigning profile and increased its turnover. She was appointed director of the Consumers’ Association in 1995, where her work contributed to the setting up of the Food Standards Agency (FSA) and changes in laws on competition, food labelling and advertising to children. She campaigned at a European level as President of the European Union Consumer Group and sat on the Bank of England board; she was extremely critical of financial institutions. Friends and colleagues found her loyal and kind, and her partnership with Alan Grant lasted twenty-seven years. She was made OBE in 1995 for services to housing and homelessness, and DBE in 2001 for services to consumers. The Sheila McKechnie Foundation (SMF) was established in 2005 in memory of her contribution to campaigning in the UK. SMF helps people develop their campaigning skills in order to bring about social change, and presents annual awards to successful campaigners. KMD

MCKECHNIE, Sheila Marshall,

• McKechnie, S. and Wilson, D. (1986) Homes above All: housing in Britain.

The Guardian, 5 Jan. 2004 (Appreciation and obit.); The Herald, 7 Jan. 2004 (Appreciation); The Scotsman, 6 Jan. 2004 (obit.); eODNB; www.smk.org.uk Private information.

n. Cameron, born Fort William 1 Oct. 1834, died Edinburgh 7 Sept. 1890. Poet and folklorist. Daughter of Allan Cameron, baker. Following her father’s death in 1845, young Mary Cameron looked after his shop until 1849 while attending school part-time. She married a sea captain, John McKellar; the couple travelled around Europe by sea for some years, surviving several shipwrecks. In 1876, Mary Mackellar settled in Edinburgh, soon afterwards obtaining a judicial separation from her husband. She taught Gaelic to *Marjory Kennedy-Fraser. From 1880, she earned her living as a writer, publishing Poems and Songs in Gaelic and English (1880), and translating *Queen Victoria’s second series of Leaves from Our Journal in the Highlands into Gaelic. An accomplished versifier, her Gaelic poetry flows easily. She was honorary bard to the Gaelic Society of Inverness, 1876–90, delivering several important lectures. Expert in the lore of her native Lochaber, her description of women’s waulking (fulling or thickening) of cloth and the accompanying choral songs, and her account of transhumance (moving cattle to summer pastures), are unique witnesses to activities fast disappearing. jm ac i

MACKELLAR, Mary,

• Mackellar, M., Works as above and (1885–6) ‘Unknown Lochaber bards’, Trans. Gael. Soc. Inverness, 12, (1886–7) ‘The Waulking Day, with Songs’, ibid., 13, (1887–9) ‘The Sheiling and its Tradition and Songs’, ibid., 14, 15, (1889–90) ‘Legends and Traditions of Lochaber’, ibid., 16. ODNB (2004); (1896) ‘Mary Mackellar, Bard and Seanachie’, Highland Monthly, 13. MACKENZIE, Agnes Mure (Muriel), CBE, born Stornoway 9 April 1891, died Edinburgh 26 Feb. 1955. Author and historian. Daughter of Agnes Drake, and Murdoch Mackenzie, physician. A graduate of the University of Aberdeen, Agnes Mure Mackenzie lectured in English Literature at Aberdeen and Birkbeck College, London. She published 40 works of literary criticism, fiction, poetry, and history and was a popular public speaker whose lectures were published by the Saltire Society, of which she was Honorary President (1942). A study of The Women in Shakespeare’s Plays (1924), her DLitt dissertation at Aberdeen, was followed by The Process of Literature (1929). Her interests then turned to her native land.

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She ­published An Historical Survey of Scottish Literature (1934) and Scottish Pageant (1946–52), a four-­volume anthology of documentary sources; the third was dedicated to her sister Jean Mackenzie, MA, her devoted lifetime companion. Despite spending most of her adult life in London, her love of the Hebrides was strong. Evocative descriptions of Lewis inform two poems, ‘Island Moon’ and ‘Aignish on the Machair’, and the novel The Quiet Lady (1926). The sisters endowed a prize in their brother’s memory at the Nicolson Institute, Stornoway, where all three were educated. Both novels and drama followed her first novel Without Conditions (1923), but Agnes Mure Mackenzie’s greatest contribution was to Scottish history. Strongly nationalist in sentiment, she raised national consciousness with her lecture on the Declaration of Arbroath, whose significance had been neglected. She explored the contribution made by Gaelic Scotland, especially in Robert Bruce (1938, 1979), and spanned Scottish history in six volumes from The Foundations of Scotland to Scotland in Modern Times (1938–41). She was made CBE in 1945 for services to Scottish history. Her work has perhaps been unduly overlooked in recent times, although she received an honorary LLD from Aberdeen in 1951, and the Saltire Society established a History Book Prize in her memory in 1965. jmn • NLS: MSS 9172–9225. Mackenzie, A. M., Works as above. See ODNB (2004) (Bibl.). Noble, J. M. (2007) ‘Dr Agnes Mure Mackenzie: the journey from novelist to historian’ History Scotland, 8, 1; The Scotsman, 28 Feb. 1955 (obit.); ‘An appreciation’, letter; The Stornoway Gazette, 4 March 1955 (obit.). Private information: Colin Scott Mackenzie, DL, June 2002. MACKENZIE, Anna, Countess of Balcarres, Countess of Argyll, born Brahan Castle, Ross-shire, 1621,

died Balcarres Castle, Fife, May 1707. Supporter of Charles II. Daughter of Lady Margaret Seton, and Colin MacKenzie, Earl of Seaforth. Anna MacKenzie lived in Brahan Castle until orphaned at age 12. Her guardian, John, Earl of Rothes, raised her with his children, including Margaret Leslie, in Leslie Castle, Fife. In 1640 she married her cousin Alexander Lindsay, Master (Earl from 1651) of Balcarres (1618–59). A covenanter, Balcarres fought for Charles II in the 1650s. In 1653, Countess Anna joined him, living with the army at Lochaber. In 1654, the couple and their daughters joined Charles II’s peripatetic European court.

Anna MacKenzie became governess to the young William of Orange, the King’s nephew. Following Balcarres’s death in the Netherlands, she returned to Scotland in 1660 to bury him, reunite with her sons, and salvage their estates. In 1670 Anna MacKenzie married Archibald Campbell, Earl of Argyll (1629–85). An ardent Presbyterian, he was sentenced to death for treason in 1681. The Countess’s daughter, Sophia Lindsay (1659–98), smuggled him out of Edinburgh Castle, disguised as a page, on 20 December. Argyll supported the Duke of Monmouth, husband of *Anna Scott, daughter of Margaret Leslie. In 1685, Countess Anna and Sophia Lindsay were imprisoned, and Argyll captured. Anna MacKenzie only saw her husband once more, on his execution day. Returning to Balcarres Castle in 1689 after James VII’s deposition, she managed the estates until her death. EE • Lindsay, A. (1868) A Memoir of Lady Anna MacKenzie; McGrigor, M. (2008) Anna, Countess of the Covenant; ODNB (2004).

born c. 1595, died Strathnaver c. 1630. Survivor of domestic abuse. Daughter of Jean Ross of Balnagown, and Kenneth Mackenzie, Lord Kintail. Barbara Mackenzie married Sir Donald Mackay of Farr (1591–1649) in 1610. They had six children, including John, 2nd Lord Reay, who married *Barbara Mackay. In January 1617, Barbara Mackenzie asked the Privy Council to pursue her husband for adultery and cruelty. He had begun an affair with Marie Lindsay, sister of the 12th Earl of Crawford, while in Edinburgh; she bore him a son. Donald Mackay brought Marie Lindsay back to his home at Durness, and ‘without pitie or compassioun’ (RPC, xi, p. 3) dragged his heavily pregnant wife from bed, dumping her in an outhouse with no roof, candles, or fire. Barbara Mackenzie was fed bread and water and had only a young kitchen lass to help with the baby’s birth. Donald Mackay was warded in Edinburgh’s tolbooth and Barbara Mackenzie took refuge with the Earl of Dunfermline, grandfather of her niece *Anna MacKenzie. Husband and wife were later reconciled, Donald Mackay paying a 2000 merk fine for adultery in 1620. No more is heard of Marie Lindsay, who had herself been named as a survivor of abuse in 1611, when a household servant was accused of her abduction and rape. Despite his behaviour to his family, Donald

MACKENZIE, Barbara, of Kintail,

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Mackay distinguished himself in royal service in the Thirty Years’ War, being made Lord Reay in 1628. In 1629, he took his family to Denmark. He apparently did not remain faithful to his wife, becoming involved in bigamy. In 1631, around the time of Barbara Mackenzie’s death, Rachel Winterfield claimed that he had married her and was the father of her son. She began legal proceedings for maintenance; the marriage was recognised as lawful in 1637, although Donald had married Elizabeth Thomson soon after Barbara Mackenzie’s death. He was jailed temporarily for non-payment of maintenance to Rachel Winterfield and her child in 1642. mmm • ODNB (2004) (Mackay, Donald, first Lord Reay); RPC, ix, p. 300, xi, pp. 2–3, 23–4, 28; xii, p. 293; RPC, 2nd ser., vi, p. 440; vii, p. 309; SP, iii, p. 31; vii, pp. 168–70, 503–4.

n. Spence, CBE, born Mortlach, Banffshire, 13 April 1859, died Edinburgh 25 Sept. 1945. Public health campaigner. Daughter of Mary McDonell, and William Spence, merchant tailor, provost of Dufftown. Helen Spence was a pupil teacher at Mortlach village school, then at the Church of Scotland Training College, Aberdeen. In 1892, she married Dr (later Sir) W. Leslie Mackenzie (1862–1935), first Medical Inspector of Schools at the Local Government Board for Scotland. Their subsequent careers were dedicated to improving the physical condition of Scottish schoolchildren, influencing many important educational reforms in the early 1900s. For a Royal Commission (1903) they conducted a pioneering investigation of the physical condition of children in Edinburgh. Helen Mackenzie organised the studies, wrote the findings and was present while her husband examined each child. Having demonstrated conclusively that children from poorer areas were smaller, lighter and less healthy than children from middle-class or rural communities, they called for routine medical inspections of school children and the training of teachers in health and hygiene. In 1903–4, Lady Leslie Mackenzie (as she was known) gave evidence before an interdepartmental committee on young people’s health: many of her recommendations were adopted in the 1908 Education (Scotland) Act. Among her numerous welfare initiatives, she assisted in the establishment of special schools for mentally handicapped ­children and campaigned for children’s medical care, rural district nursing services and continuation classes for young women. She helped her

MACKENZIE, Helen Carruthers,

friend *Elsie Inglis to obtain better maternity hospital facilities in Edinburgh, and sat on the Edinburgh School Board and the Council of the Edinburgh College of Domestic Science (now Queen Margaret University), chairing it from 1943 to 1945. In recognition, in 1933 she was appointed CBE and received an LLD from the University of Edinburgh. A gifted public speaker, she gave speeches ‘marked by directness and candour, and spiced with a characteristic humour that gripped attention’ (Scotsman 1945). tb • Parl. Papers (1903) Royal Commission on physical training (Scotland), vol. 30, Cd. 1507–8; Parl. Papers (1904) ‘Interdepartmental committee on physical deterioration: list of witnesses and evidence’, 32.54, 275–8, Cd. 2186 (evidence of Mrs Leslie Mackenzie). Begg, T. (1994) The Excellent Women; (1945) Edinburgh College of Domestic Science Magazine, Oct.; *ODNB (2004); The Scotsman, 3 July 1937 and 26 Sept. 1945 (obit.); WoM. MACKENZIE, Isabel, Countess of Seaforth, born c. 1640, buried Holyrood 18 Feb. 1715. Estate manager. Daughter of Margaret Erskine, and Sir John Mackenzie of Tarbat. Isabel Mackenzie married in 1658 Kenneth Mackenzie, 3rd Earl of Seaforth (1635–78), who, it was said, received ‘neither beuty, parts, portion, relation’ (Mackay 1905, p.421). After his death in 1678, a new title to the estate was established in her person. She played a central role in dealing with the Seaforth family’s financial, personal and political crises. The continual struggle made her feel that her ‘trublls shall neuer end till my tym end’ (Fraser 1876, p.146). After her son’s marriage, she was known as the Countess Dowager; after 1701 and her eldest son’s death she became the Countess Dowager ‘elder’ to distinguish her from his widow Frances. Difficulties with Frances, who gained possession of the estate in 1706, forced her to take refuge from her creditors in the sanctuary of Holyrood. mb-j

• Fraser, W. (1876) The Earls of Cromartie ; Mackay, W. (ed.) (1905) Chronicles of the Frasers: the Wardlaw manuscript ; Warrand, D. (1965) Some Mackenzie Pedigrees. MACKENZIE, Joan Murray, m. MacLeod (Seonag NicCoinnich), born Point, Isle of Lewis 2 Sept. 1929,

died Edinburgh 13 May 2007. Traditional singer, wine merchant. Daughter of Iseabail Murray, domestic servant, and Murchadh MacKenzie, crofter-fisherman. In their singing household, Gaelic was the first language of Joan MacKenzie and her sisters, and she first learned songs and stories from neighbours

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and relatives. After the local primary school, she attended the Nicolson Institute in Stornoway, then Jordanhill College of Education in Glasgow. Joan (Seonag) MacKenzie was teaching in Lewis when she was persuaded to compete at the National Mod. She came top in several competitions, and in 1955, in Aberdeen, won the prestigious Gold Medal, presented by the Queen Mother. In 1956 she married RAF pilot Roddy MacLeod, and they had three sons. Moving to Edinburgh, they opened a wine shop, and Joan MacKenzie gained another reputation – as an outstanding connoisseur of wine. Scholars from the School of Scottish Studies, founded to collect traditional songs and stories in Gaelic and Scots (1951), greatly valued her help to illustrate talks with her singing. Drawing on songs learned from custodian of Gaelic song Rev. William Matheson, and on her own Lewis background, Joan MacKenzie performed on radio and TV, the latter with the group The Edin Singers. As a soloist and adjudicator, she travelled widely in Scotland, including cruises to St Kilda, taught Gaelic learners in schools in Greenock and Edinburgh, and, with her husband, particularly followed and furthered pipe music. mm ac l • MacKenzie, J. (1999) album, Seonag NicCoinnich, School of Scottish Studies/Greentrax Recordings. The Herald, 29 May 2007, The Scotsman, 8 June 2007 (obits). MACKENZIE, Katherine, n. Sutherland,

born Dunrobin Castle, Sutherland 9 Jan. 1773, died Cromarty 24 June 1844. Member of a slave-owning family. Daughter of Elizabeth Baillie, and Lt. Col. James Sutherland of Uppat, factor for the Earl of Sutherland. In 1801 Katherine Sutherland married Robert Mackenzie (1743–1809), a lieutenant-colonel in the East India Company; they had four children. Her family possessed property interests in the Caribbean island of St Vincent as well as estates in Scotland. After the death of her brother Robert Sutherland in 1825, three of her nephews inherited the Orange Hill and Waterloo estates, together with those enslaved upon them. She and her sister, Mary Maxwell Sutherland, were each provided with an annuity of £200 ‘for their separate use independently of their present and future husbands’ (Will of Robert Sutherland). Katherine Mackenzie continued to maintain an interest in these estates. She wrote numerous letters to the Slave Compensation Commission, set up in 1833 to facilitate the awarding of com-

pensation to slave-owners following the abolition of slavery in the British Caribbean, Mauritius and the Cape. She was determined to uncover ‘what numbers of slaves’ (letter 16 Mar. 1838, T71/1610) were attached to the two estates, and to whom the corresponding compensation had been awarded, indicating, probably, that her annuity had not been paid and was dependent on the estates. They were heavily indebted; almost all the £11,219 17s 5d provided as compensation for the loss of the 551 people enslaved on the two estates was awarded to mortgagees or creditors. The formerly enslaved, of course, received nothing. HY • NA: PROB 11/1749/290, Will of Robert Sutherland, T71/1610, Office of Registry of Colonial Slaves and Slave Compensation Commission: In-letters, original: Guiana, Montserrat, Bermuda, Bahamas, Tobago, St Vincent. ‘Katherine Mackenzie (née Sutherland)’, Legacies of British Slave-ownership database, www.ucl.ac.uk/lbs/person/ view/2146630643; Mackenzie, A. (1894) History of the Mackenzies.

born Tangier c. 1675, died 1743. Estate manager, supporter of Catholicism in the Highlands. Daughter apparently of a German woman, and Col. Alexander Mackenzie. Probably due to family connections, Penelope Mackenzie was sent from Tangier, where her father was stationed, to the Jacobite court in exile at St Germain, where she won much admiration for her charm and beauty. There she met the young Captain of Clan Ranald, Allan MacDonald (Ailean Dearg), who had been badly wounded while in French service, following his flight from Scotland after the battle of Killiecrankie (1689). The love-match determined the rest of her life. She accompanied her husband home to South Uist in 1696 after he made peace with the authorities, a step facilitated by her sister’s marriage into the influential Villiers family. The couple probably brought with them ‘the african secretarie’, ancestor of the present-day Buies (Bowies) in South Uist. Oral tradition reports her dissatisfaction with the existing clan stronghold in Borgh – ‘like a hen-house’ – and that she made her husband build her a snug little mansion at Ormacleit. The elegant court he gathered, with bard, piper, and harper, not only represents a last bastion of classical Gaelic culture, but was a focus for renewed Jacobite intrigue. Allan MacDonald died from a wound sustained at the Battle of Sheriffmuir (1715), reputedly on the day his Ormacleit mansion burnt down.

MACKENZIE, Penelope,

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With his brother and heir in exile, the burden of ensuring the return of the forfeited Clan Ranald estates rested upon Allan’s widow. Combining a charm offensive with astute, relentless lobbying in London and more forceful tactics in Uist, Penelope Mackenzie and lawyer siblings John and Alexander Mackenzie won the support of the Duke of Argyll, superior of many Clan Ranald lands. In 1727, the estates returned to MacDonald control. Her widow’s jointure and her excessive generosity laid a heavy burden upon the already badly indebted Clan Ranald finances, continuing beyond her death. Penelope Mackenzie is notable for her political intriguing and networking and her cultural patronage, but also as a supporter of the Roman Catholic mission, enabling it to consolidate its hold on the ‘heartland’ Clan Ranald territories. Penelope remains a common name for girls in South Uist. dus • NRS: E648/13/4; GD201/1/198-9, 212, 217, 219, 221, 228, 259; /4/41; /5/21, 23, 29, 37, 39, 46, 54, 982; NLS: MS 1303 fos. 7–182; MS 1304, fos. 6–187 passim. Clark, J. T. (ed.) (1900) MacFarlane’s Genealogical Collections I, p. 90; Hopkins, P. (1998) Glencoe and the end of the Highland War, pp. 391, 398–9; Macdonald, A. and Macdonald, A. (1900–4) Clan Donald, ii, pp. 340–5, 349; iii, p. 233; Mackenzie, A. (1881) History of the MacDonalds and Lords of the Isles, pp. 421–4, 427–8; Stewart, Jr., J. A. (1982) ‘The Clan Ranald: history of a Highland kindred’, PhD, Univ. of Edinburgh. MACKINNON, Doris Livingstone, born Aberdeen 30 Sept. 1883, died London 10 Sept. 1956. Zoologist. Daughter of Theodora Thompson, and Lachlan Mackinnon, advocate. The eldest of five children, Doris Mackinnon graduated BSc from the University of Aberdeen in 1906, then DSc in 1914, having been encouraged by *Maria Ogilvie Gordon, and furthering her studies with a Carnegie Scholarship. In 1909, as an assistant in the Zoology Department at University College Dundee, she published several papers on parasites, and prepared many of the diagrams for Professor D’Arcy Wentworth Thompson’s influential book On Growth and Form (1917). Between 1916 and 1918 she was seconded to military hospitals to work on intestinal infections, returning to Dundee afterwards as acting head of the Zoology Department. In 1919, she was appointed Lecturer, then in 1927 Professor, of Zoology at King’s College London – the first female professor there. Throughout her career she produced numerous academic papers on parasitic

protozoa (see her Wikipedia entry for a full list) and was regarded as an inspirational and supportive lecturer. During the 1930s she presented radio broadcasts, including schools programmes on biology. Two genera of protozoa were named after her, Dorisa and Dorisiella. Another interest was music, and, using her excellent German, she translated a work on the musical sketches of Beethoven, which was well received. In 1939 Doris Mackinnon was made a Fellow of King’s College London, receiving the title Emeritus Professor in 1949. The University of Aberdeen awarded her an Honorary LLD in 1945. Her book on the protozoa, unfinished at her death, was later completed by her collaborator, R. S. J. Hawes. CMB • Mackinnon, D. L. (1936 and 1952) The Animal’s World; Mackinnon, D. L. and Hawes, R. S. J. (1961) An Introduction to the Study of Protozoa; Mies, P. and Mackinnon, D. L. (translator, 1929) Beethoven’s Sketches: an analysis of his style. Dawes, B. (1956) ‘Prof. Doris Mackinnon’, Nature, 17 Nov., pp. 1093–94; ODNB (2004); The Times, 20 Sept. 1956 (obit.). MACKINNON, Georgina Russell (Gina), n. Davidson, OBE, born Wick 1 March 1884, died Linlithgow 11 April 1973. Chairman of Drambuie. Daughter of Maggie Dean Russell, and John Davidson, fish food processor. Gina Davidson arrived in Edinburgh c. 1910 to work as a school teacher, and met Malcolm MacKinnon at St Oram’s Highland Church. They married in 1915, and had two children, Margaret (b. 1916), who became a doctor, and Norman (b. 1923), later Managing Director of Drambuie. Malcolm MacKinnon had come from Skye in 1900 to work in the whisky business, but in 1909 he began mixing commercial quantities of the old MacKinnon liqueur ‘Drambuie’, and in 1914 established the Drambuie Liqueur Company Ltd. Gina MacKinnon’s two brothers became directors of the company in the 1920s. In the 1930s, she ran the household at Hillwood House, Corstorphine, which became the company’s headquarters in 1998, but when Malcolm MacKinnon died in 1945, aged 62, she became Chairman (sic) of the company. The 1950s and 1960s were the heyday of her involvement: sales took off and Drambuie became the most widely distributed liqueur in the world, selling in more than 150 countries. Gina MacKinnon travelled widely, sometimes accompanied by her personal bagpipers, appearing in newspapers and magazines and on radio and TV. She began the tradition, which is continued today, whereby the mixing of the secret essence at

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the heart of Drambuie is known only to a female member of the family, who prepares the mixture in a private laboratory once a month. To the US press, she became known as ‘the canny wee granny with the $2m secret’. In 1964, she was awarded the OBE for services to British exports. She passed on the Drambuie secret to her daughter-in-law on her retirement to a mansion outside Linlithgow, and enjoyed a successful second career as a prizewinning breeder of Jersey cattle. rp • Robin Nicholson, Curator, The Drambuie Collection; The Drambuie Liqueur Company Ltd. MACKINNON, Nan (Nan Eachainn Fhionnlaigh), born Kentangaval, Barra, 12 Dec. 1902, died Vatersay 24 June 1982. Tradition-bearer. Daughter of Mary MacPhee, and Hector MacKinnon, fisherman. Nan Eachainn Fhionnlaigh spent much of her life, apart from five years on the mainland, in Vatersay, having moved there with her family when she was four. From 1940, she looked after her late sister’s children. Her immense repertoire of songs, stories and miscellaneous lore was first recorded by Donald MacPherson, a native of Barra, and later by the School of Scottish Studies, University of Edinburgh. She contributed more than any other individual to the School’s archives of Scottish Gaelic material – some 600 songs and around 1,000 proverbs (often accompanied by explanatory comment), anecdotes, adages and idiomatic phrases, all carried in her memory. Some songs came from the now deserted island of Mingulay, where she had family connections. Her singing style was unique, with slow rhythm and minimal volume. Her voice was minor in tone, yet intense, giving the impression of a strangely pitched wind instrument. Some musicologists considered her style highly idiosyncratic; others suggested she was a unique exponent of an otherwise lost art. jm ac i

• McDermitt, B. (1983) ‘Nan MacKinnon’, Tocher, 38. Private information. MACKINTOSH, Lady Anne, (‘Colonel Anne’), n. Farquharson, born 1723, died Leith 2 March 1787.

Jacobite. Daughter of Margaret Murray, and John Farquharson of Invercauld. Anne Mackintosh was 22 years old at the outbreak of the 1745 Jacobite Rising. Her husband, Aeneas (Angus), whom she married in 1741, was chief of the clan Mackintosh. A captain in the Black Watch, he was absent from home, meeting his military commitments to the Hanoverian

government, when his wife raised his relatives and tenants in support of Prince Charles Edward Stewart and the last attempt to regain the British throne for the Stewarts. Despite contemporary propaganda portraying her as a warlike Amazon, she never led men into battle, handing over command of the 300-strong Lady Mackintosh’s Regiment to her husband’s cousin, Alexander MacGillivray of Dunmaglass. In February 1746, while giving hospitality to Prince Charles Edward Stewart and his retinue at Moy Hall, Invernessshire, she played a pivotal role in the Rout of Moy, a ruse which pitted five men against 1,500. Government commander Lord Loudon, bent on seizing the Prince, was fooled into retreating in the erroneous belief that his quarry was being guarded by a substantial force. Tradition has it that Anne Mackintosh’s greeting to her husband when he was captured by the Jacobites and given into her custody in February 1746 was a polite, ‘Your servant, Captain’. He is alleged to have replied, ‘Your servant, Colonel,’ acknowledging the nickname which her raising of the clan had earned her. After the Jacobite defeat at Culloden in April 1746, she was arrested and detained in Inverness for six weeks, but then released without charge into her husband’s custody. Following his death in 1770, she moved to the Lowlands. A recently erected plaque marks her gravesite in North Leith Churchyard. mec • Blaikie, W. B. B. [1916] (1975) Origins of the ’Forty-Five ; Craig, M. (1997) Damn’ Rebel Bitches: the women of the ’45; Macdonald, F. (1987) ‘Colonel Anne’ – Lady Anne Mackintosh; ODNB (2004). MACKINTOSH, Elizabeth, [Josephine Tey, Gordon Daviot], born Inverness 25 July 1896, died London

13 Feb. 1952. Novelist and dramatist. Daughter of Josephine Horne, teacher, and Colin MacKintosh, fruiterer. One of three sisters, Elizabeth MacKintosh was educated at Inverness Royal Academy, and Anstey Physical Training College, Birmingham (1915–17). She worked as a physiotherapist in the Midlands, briefly in Oban, and in Tunbridge Wells. She returned to Inverness to nurse her mother, who died in 1926, and keep house for her father until his death in 1950, taking up writing as an alternative career. Her early short stories and first detective novel, The Man in the Queue (1929), together with three other novels, appeared under the pseudonym ‘Gordon Daviot’; she had spent family holidays at Daviot, near Inverness. Success

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as a dramatist, under the same name, came with Richard of Bordeaux, first produced in 1932. A year later, John Gielgud played the title role with Gwen Ffrangcon Davies as leading lady; both became lifelong friends, and Elizabeth MacKintosh frequently visited London to keep up with her theatrical acquaintances. She adopted a second pseudonym for A Shilling for Candles (1936), and as ‘Josephine Tey’ became well known for her literate and unconventional detective stories. Still known as Elizabeth MacKintosh in Inverness, she herself preferred the name Gordon Daviot: her entry in Who’s Who was, at her request, under that name, as was her death notice in The Times. Extremely shy, she attended no functions and never gave interviews. Readers have searched for clues to her life in her novels; Miss Pym Disposes (1946) takes its setting from her college years, but nothing further can be reliably established. John Gielgud admitted that though they were friends for many years, he did not know her intimately; he thought she might have lost a close friend or lover in the First World War. According to a schoolmate, she had an obsessive fear that her life would be too short to write everything she wanted to (MacDonald 1982). She apparently dismissed her detective novels as her ‘yearly knitting’ (Gielgud 1953, p. 1). Nevertheless, these eight novels are highly regarded – her hero Alan Grant is an early example of the fallible, selfdoubting detective. Most notable perhaps are The Franchise Affair (1948) and The Daughter of Time (1951); in the latter, Grant investigates the case of the Princes in the Tower and concludes (controversially for some) that Richard III was not guilty of their murder. She was diagnosed with terminal cancer in late October 1951; her death less than four months later shocked her friends. MARB • NLS: Acc. 4771: papers. Daviot, G. and Tey, J., Works as above, and see Bibls below. The BL catalogue also lists works. Butler, P. J. (2002) ‘The mystery of Josephine Tey’: www.r3.org/fiction/mysteries/tey_butler.html Gielgud, J. (1953) Foreword to Plays by Gordon Daviot; HSWW (Bibl.); Henderson, J. M. (2015) Josephine Tey: a life; MacDonald, M. A. (1982) By the Banks of the Ness: tales from the history of Inverness and district; Morris, V. B. (1989) ‘Josephine Tey (Elizabeth MacKintosh, Gordon Daviot)’, DLB Gale, 77, ‘British mystery writers, 1920–1939’, pp. 284–96 (Bibl.); ODNB (2004); Williamson, A. (1982) ‘Gordon Daviot (Elizabeth MacKintosh)’, DLB Gale, 10, ‘Modern British dramatists 1900–1945’, pp. 139–41.

MACLACHLAN, Jessie Niven, m. Buchanan, born Oban 18 June 1866, died Glasgow 13 May 1916. Gaelic and Scots singer, ‘the Scots Prima Donna’. Daughter of Margaret Niven, and Alexander MacLachlan, auctioneer. Jessie MacLachlan’s soprano voice attracted her first audiences at Highland gatherings throughout Argyllshire. Largely self-taught, she began to achieve fame as a ‘sweet singer of Gaelic ballads’. In 1887, she married Robert Buchanan, a prominent Glasgow musician who became her constant accompanist on the piano, but she continued to sing under her maiden name. The inaugural Mod of An Comunn Gaidhealach took place in 1892. Shortly after singing at the evening concert on that occasion, attended by HRH *Princess Louise (married to the Marquis of Lorne), Jessie MacLachlan was invited to perform for *Queen Victoria at Balmoral. She sang both Scottish and Gaelic songs there, reportedly the first artist to do so since Gaelic as a language had been proscribed. In 1899, her voice was recorded on an early German-invented disc. She made two world tours, singing to large audiences of expatriate Gaels and Scots in Australia, New Zealand, Canada and the USA. The outbreak of the First World War found Jessie MacLachlan and her husband in France: their hazardous journey home on board a tramp steamer via Spain contributed to her death shortly before her 50th birthday at the height of her fame. Now largely forgotten, in her day Jessie MacLachlan’s world reputation as a Scottish artist was possibly exceeded only by that of Harry Lauder. mm / m v h

• Badenoch Record, 23 Sept. 1921; Campbeltown Courier, 20 May 1916 (obit.); Glasgow Star, 12 March 1904, ‘Miss Jessie N. Maclachlan. An interesting talk with the Scottish prima donna’; John O’Groats Journal, 23 Sept. 1921; Press and Journal, 10 March 2001; The Times, 15 May 1916 (obit.). MCLACHLAN (MACLAUGHLAN), Margaret, born c. 1614; WILSON, Agnes, born c. 1678; WILSON, Margaret, born c. 1667. ‘The Wigtown Martyrs’.

One of the most contentious and mythologised episodes of the Covenanting persecutions alleges that two women, Margaret McLachlan and Margaret Wilson, were executed by drowning at Wigtown on 11 May 1685. This case represents a classic example of ongoing tensions between oral tradition and documented corroboration. The legend was designed to embarrass the Government by highlighting supposed atrocities. The two women and Margaret Wilson’s younger sister Agnes, were, according to Robert Wodrow,

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tried on 13 April 1685 before the Justiciary Court at Wigtown, and Agnes freed on payment of £100 sterling, an unrealistically enormous sum. The others were tied to stakes between the high and low water mark, Margaret McLachlan being placed further out to encourage Margaret Wilson to recant. Instead, the younger woman sang the 25th psalm and read from Romans while her sister in Christ expired. Margaret Wilson was held above the rising waters one last time but refused the opportunity to save herself and so perished. Wodrow’s allegation that they were indicted for being present at the battles of Bothwell Bridge and Aird’s Moss is quite untenable; Agnes Wilson was only seven at the time. Moreover, the Privy Council explicitly refused to prosecute anyone aged 16 and under. A petition on the 70-yearold Margaret McLachlan’s behalf admits she was justly condemned because she refused to disown the Apologetical Declaration (of 1684, threatening death to all opponents of the Covenant) and had declined abjuration of the Covenant. She ­acknowledged that the said declaration was ­traitorous and was willing to abjure. Probably a similar plea was entered for the 18-year-old Margaret Wilson; both women received a reprieve on 30 April. The ­evidence suggests the executions never occurred. Women were prominent among the Covenanters, but only two were executed. Isabel Alison (born 1650s) from Perth and Marion Harvey (born c. 1661), a servant from Bo’ness, were hanged on 26 January 1681 at the Grassmarket in Edinburgh, alongside five women convicted of infanticide. Lord Fountainhall commented on their hanging, and Sir George Mackenzie wrote extensively about women and the law. If the Wigtown women had been executed, these writers would have discussed such a prominent case. Another controversy concerns the graves. There is no evidence that Margaret Wilson’s Wigtown gravestone existed before 1730. Indeed, residing as she did in nearby Penninghame, why would she have been buried in Wigtown? It is a similar story with Margaret McLachlan who came from Kirkinner. The ‘new’ monument to the Wigtown Martyrs was dedicated as recently as 1938. ejc • Anderson, J. (1857) Ladies of the Covenant; Cowan, E. J. (2002) ‘The Covenanting tradition in Scottish history’, in E. J. Cowan and R. J. Finlay (eds) Scottish History: the power of the past (Bibl.); Napier, M. (1863) The Case for the Crown in re the Wigtown Martyrs Proved to be Myths; Stewart, A. (1869)

History vindicated in the case of the Wigtown Martyrs; ODNB (2004) (Wilson, Margaret); Wodrow, R. [1721–2] (1823) The History of the Suffering of the Church of Scotland. MACLAGAN, Christian, born near Denny, baptised 26 July 1811, died Stirling 10 May 1901. Archaeologist and philanthropist. Daughter of Janet Colville, and George MacLagan, distiller. The third child of a literary family, Christian MacLagan was brought up in Stirlingshire and moved to Stirling c. 1820. Her widowed mother and clerical grandfather inspired her interest in history and religion. She followed ‘the pope of Stirling’, the Rev. Dr Alexander Beith, into the Free Church on the Disruption of 1843, holding to the literal truth of the Bible which influenced her self-taught archaeological theories. She believed that megalithic circles and tombs were remnants of circular houses and forts and that, as with the Bible, a message would reveal itself on scholarly examination of the architectural ‘language’. She described hill forts and Neolithic monuments in Brittany and Sardinia and carefully recorded hundreds of early medieval gravestones with rubbings. She published her findings, interspersed with anthropological comment, at her own expense. Her ideas were eccentric even to her contemporaries, but her publications preserve valuable records of now-eroded sites. Christian MacLagan shared her home, ‘Ravenscroft’ in Stirling, with a companion, Jessie Hunter Colvin (1825–90), a minister’s daughter and also an antiquary, who predeceased her. Christian MacLagan was acutely aware of her academic disadvantage, denied access to learned societies and research libraries because of her sex. She was elected as the second Lady Associate of the Society of Antiquaries in 1871. The first was Lady John Scott (*Alicia Ann Spottiswoode). When Christian MacLagan was denied equal membership with men she bequeathed her catalogued rubbings to the British Museum. She spoke and exhibited drawings and models at the Stirling Natural History and Archaeological Society, the British Association (aged over 80), and corresponded with Dr James Young Simpson and other notable academics. When, on occasion, she felt slighted, she could carry resentments for years. In one case, she generously funded a Free Kirk in Stirling and then looked for a congregation to accept the building. After a disagreement and court case in 1875–6, she repossessed the church. Later rejoining the Church

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of Scotland, her more positive nature showed in charitable contributions to Sunday Schools, church missions, workers’ housing, and her own servants’ welfare. In 2016 a wood carving by Iain Chalmers was erected in her honour near the Stirling Smith Art Gallery and Museum. mamc • MacLagan, C. (1872) ‘On the round castles and ancient dwellings of the valley of the Forth . . .’, Proc. Soc. Antiquaries Scot. pp. 29–44, (1875) The Hill Forts, Stone Circles and other Structural Remains of Ancient Scotland, (1881) Chips from Old Stones, private printing, G. Waterston, (1894) What Mean these Stones?, (1898) Catalogue Raisonné of the British Museum Collection of Rubbings from Ancient Sculptured Stones. Cook, W. B. (1903) ‘The Late Miss C. MacLagan’, Stirling Antiquary, III (1900–3), pp. 219–21; Elsdon, S. M. (2004) Christian MacLagan; ODNB (2004); The Scotsman, 13 May 1901 (obit.); Stirling Journal & Advertiser, 17 May 1901 (obit.). MACLAGAN, Mary Louisa, n. Kerr, born Hamilton, Ontario 7 May 1853, died Comrie, Perthshire 29 Sept. 1943. Philanthropist. Daughter of Catherine Maclaren, and Archibald Kerr, merchant. The Kerr family moved to Edinburgh in 1861, and in 1876 Mary Kerr married David Douglas Maclagan from a well-established philanthropic local family. They had four children. Mary Maclagan’s contribution to the founding (1885) and operation of Patrick Geddes’s Edinburgh Social Union (ESU) has been described as ‘pivotal’ (Burbridge 2014, p. 79). While Geddes, having inspired the scheme, likened himself to ‘the boy who rings the doorbell and then runs away’ (ibid., p. 90, and see *Anna Geddes), the long-term workings of this project for improving living conditions in rented accommodation for poorer families in Edinburgh’s Old Town required the commitment and management experience of a group of devoted middle-class women. Mary Maclagan, a leading member, served on the Executive Committee between 1885 and 1920, and as treasurer to the Housing Committee from 1889. A keen bookbinder, she also devoted herself to the Decorative Arts Committee, recruiting artists to beautify public buildings. Her longstanding colleague *Elizabeth Haldane provided a link between the ESU and the scheme’s London mentor, Octavia Hill. Helen Kerr, n. Howden (1859–1940), whose husband’s wealth was instrumental in buying up tenements to improve and manage, was a third key figure. She led negotiations with the city corporation in the 1890s, gave evidence to the Royal

Commission on the Poor Laws, and published a book on ESU ideas (Kerr 1912). While Mary Maclagan, after several personal misfortunes, took little part in the ESU after 1920, Helen Kerr, its longest-serving member, played a prominent role in Scottish social services, especially regarding nursing, after the First World War. In touch with the ESU, and Geddes, was young Englishwoman Lilian (known as Lileen) Hardy (1872–1947), who came to Edinburgh in 1901 as a Froebel-trained governess, and in 1906 founded St Saviour’s Child-Garden (SSCG), a free kindergarten for poor children, under the auspices of Old St Paul’s church. Run on self-development principles – free play, caring for pets, gardening – the SSGH ran until the 1970s. As its principal until her retirement in 1927, Lileen Hardy published an influential account (1912) still cited in education circles. This generation of middle-class women put their social consciences to work with practical achievements which have recently attracted more attention (Darling 2017). SR • Hardy, L. (1912) The Diary of a Free Kindergarten; Kerr, Mrs G. (1912) The Path of Social Progress: a discussion of old and new ideas in social reform. Burbridge, V. (2014) ‘Sympathy, synthesis and synergy’ in W. Stephen (ed.) Learning from the Lasses: women of the Patrick Geddes circle, pp. 73–93; Cumming, E. (2006) Head, Heart and Soul: the Arts and Crafts movement in Scotland; Darling, E. (2017) ‘Womanliness in the slums: a free kindergarten in early twentieth-century Edinburgh’, Gender and History, 29, 2, pp. 359–86; Meller, H. (1990) Patrick Geddes, Social Evolutionist and City Planner; Nawrotski, K. D. (2009) ‘Greatly changed for the better: free kindergartens as transatlantic reformance’, History of Education Quarterly, pp. 182–95.

born Edinburgh 4 July 1837, died Antibes 17 April 1913. Physician and Catholic campaigner, suffragist. Daughter of Christina Gordon Renton, and Duncan McLaren, draper, Liberal politician. Agnes McLaren was brought up by her stepmother, *Priscilla Bright McLaren. Drawn early into charitable work and campaigning, she was secretary of the EWSS from 1869, and toured Scotland on its behalf with *Jane Taylour in the early 1870s. Having befriended *Sophia JexBlake, she decided to become a doctor in order to help women and children. Her family were not keen but, at the age of 38, she enrolled to study medicine in Montpellier, graduating in 1878 and obtaining a licence (Dublin 1879). She settled in

MCLAREN, Agnes,

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Cannes, practising medicine, and in 1898 joined the Catholic Church. From then on, she campaigned for Catholic nuns to be trained as nurses and doctors for medical missions abroad, particularly in India (something forbidden by canon law). Agnes McLaren raised funds for a Catholic hospital in Rawalpindi, where a lay doctor was appointed. She made several journeys to Rome to plead with the Vatican, but died before a religious Society of Catholic Medical Missionaries could be achieved. Her protégée, Anna Dengel, had more success in the 1920s and canon law was reversed in 1936, allowing religious to train in obstetrics and as doctors. Agnes McLaren, who regularly returned to Edinburgh, was spoken of as combining ‘strong purpose with instinctive aloofness . . . shyness . . . and old world grace’ (Todd 1918, p. 324). sr • Women’s Library, London: nominal files; NLS: MSS 24810–15, McLaren papers. AGC; Burton, K. (1946) According to the Pattern; Spender, C. (1946) ‘The fulfilment of a dream’, The Catholic Citizen, 22, 4, April; Todd, M. (1918) The Life of Sophia Jex-Blake; BMJ 26 April, 1913 (obit.). MCLAREN, Priscilla, n. Bright, born Rochdale, Lancs., 8 Sept. 1815, died Edinburgh 5 Nov. 1906. Women’s rights campaigner. Daughter of Martha Wood, and Jacob Bright, cotton manufacturer. Fifth of 11 children, Priscilla Bright belonged to a famous campaigning Quaker family in England, and married into one of the bestknown Presbyterian Liberal dynasties in Scotland. Educated at schools in York and Liverpool, she had an early encounter with prison reformer Elizabeth Fry. Having helped her widowed brother, John Bright, to bring up his daughter, Helen, she became close to his late wife’s family, the Priestmans, another Quaker dynasty, and was particularly friendly with Margaret Priestman (Holton 2007, pp. 87–9). Through John she also met the Edinburgh draper and Liberal politician Duncan McLaren (1800–1886). They married in 1848, and she lived thereafter in Edinburgh, where her husband was city provost (1851–4) and MP for the city (1865–81). The McLaren clan was large: Priscilla became stepmother to five children, and had a further three herself. Her grandchildren included sculptor Ottilie McLaren, later Wallace (1875–1947). Both of her brothers, her husband, two sons, one stepson and a grandson became MPs during her long lifetime. Priscilla Bright McLaren was a lifelong supporter of women’s rights, taking an energetic part

in many campaigns, and being connected by family or friendship with many leading activists. In 1870, both she and her husband supported Josephine Butler’s campaign against the Contagious Diseases Acts. At about the same time, they supported the efforts to have women admitted to Edinburgh’s medical school. Priscilla Bright McLaren actively campaigned for the abolition of slavery (over which she was in touch with *Elizabeth Pease Nichol) and for temperance. Above all, she became identified with the radical campaign for women’s suffrage. Having supported John Stuart Mill’s 1867 amendment, she was the first president of the EWSS, set up after its defeat. (She was still going strong in this role in the 1890s.) Her stepdaughter, *Dr Agnes McLaren, became joint secretary with *Eliza Wigham. Two thousand signatures were collected in Edinburgh and more petitions followed (AGC, p. 12). The Bright brothers were on opposite sides in this battle, John being against and Jacob for women’s suffrage. Priscilla Bright McLaren wrote that John ‘ought to keep silence when he sees all his women relations for women’s suffrage’ (Holton 1996, p. 64). She became exasperated with the Gladstonian Liberals’ failure to support it in the 1880s, and reported that her husband looked ‘very sorrowful’ (ibid., p. 66). ‘Generally liked and conciliatory’ (ibid., p. 59), Priscilla Bright McLaren favoured setting up an international movement, and was active in Edinburgh, inclining towards the militant wing, although she died before the WSPU got going. In extreme old age, she sent a deathbed letter to suffrage activists in prison, praising their ‘noble courage and self-sacrifice’ (Times obit. 1906). She died in the family home, Newington House (now demolished). sr • NLS: MSS 24810–15, McLaren papers; MSS 21502–40 Wallace papers. AGC; Holton, S. S. (1996) Suffrage Days, (2007) Quaker Women: personal life, memory and radicalism in the lives of women friends 1780–1930; ODNB (2004); The Times, 7 Nov. 1906 (obit.). MCLEAN, Agnes, n. Bell, born Glasgow 15 March 1843, died Edinburgh 23 Jan. 1940. Scottish Cooperative Women’s Guild Leader. Daughter of Minnie McNicol, and Peter Bell, shoemaker. In 1870 Agnes Bell married Alexander McLean, baker. She was called ‘Mother’ of the SCWG, since, as a later Guild leader, President Annie Buchan, observed, ‘Mrs. McLean was to our Women’s Guild what the Rochdale Pioneers were to the Co-operative movement’ (Annual Report 1905,

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p. 8). Founder-member of the first Guild branch, in Kinning Park Glasgow (1890), Agnes McLean was elected the first President of the SCWG in 1893, and three times again during her long years on the Central Council. With her splendid voice and stirring addresses, she helped organise branches all over the country. She wanted the Guild to practise ‘mutual aid’ among women, and ‘develop the latent talent that only wanted a chance to show that the “hand that rocked the cradle” was directed by a brain’ (Buchan 1913, p. 13). Like other pioneers, she had to negotiate gender prejudice. She was represented as an impeccable housekeeper to justify her public activity: ‘Mr McLean will tell you, behind his wife’s back, that more than once she has been up at four in the morning so that the washing might be got through before she left for a meeting. Critics of the guild please note’ (Scottish Co-operator (SC ), 21 March 1903). In 1898, her husband was victimised as part of a traders’ boycott against co-operative societies, and the family moved to Edinburgh. She had a daughter, and a son who was killed in action in 1917. In the on-going tension between ‘industrial’ work (sewing and other home-craft) and ‘intellectual’ work, Mother McLean trod a careful path. She wanted women to develop citizenship skills (hear lectures, write papers, speak in public), but realistically combined this with the ‘industrial’ work that attracted members. Thus a woman could ‘bring cloth for a suit for a boy to the Guild meeting and have it cut and fitted, and sewn with the machine’ while also taking tea, singing songs and listening to a lecture (SC Oct. 1893). During Agnes McLean’s lifetime, the SCWG grew from 14 branches with 1,491 members to become one of the largest-ever women’s organisations, boasting 421 branches and 32,854 members in 1939. Even more remarkable, the Guild attracted the hardest group to organise: married, working-class women. Mother McLean was judged ‘one of the greatest working-class women who has ever been in this country’ (President Mrs Small, SC, 25 Jan. 1941). Her memorial fund refurbished four bedrooms at the Seamill Convalescent Home and presented a grandmother clock to the Abbotview Home. ey • Mitchell Library Glasgow: The Scottish Co-operative Wholesale Society Archive, printed and MS sources, catalogued under ‘CWS Additions’. Buchan, A. (1913) History of the Scottish Co-operative Women’s Guild 1892–1913; Edinburgh News, 23 Jan. 1940 (funeral notice); Scottish Co-operative Women’s Guild (1894–1920) Annual Reports 1–50; Scottish Co-operator (SC ) 1893–1940, 3 Feb. 1940 (obit.).

born Glasgow 4 Dec. 1918, died Glasgow 25 April 1994. Trade unionist, councillor, dancer. Daughter of Sarah Ann (Sally) McLean, and Colin McLean, shipyard worker. Agnes McLean was born into a family committed to socialist politics: her father was a follower of John MacLean. She and her sister Sadie attended Proletarian Sunday School and then Socialist Sunday School. She started work at 14 as a bookbinder at Collins publishers where, after faster working methods were introduced, she successfully fought for a halfpenny rise. She began work at the Rolls Royce aero-engine plant at Hillington on Christmas Day 1939, later joining the AEU. She led a brief strike action over equal pay in 1941 and a more effective strike in December 1943, furthering the cause of women throughout the labour movement. In 1954, Agnes McLean was the first woman elected to serve on the AEU executive. By 1968, she was on a women’s committee organising factories on the Hillington estate in support of British-wide action for equal pay. In 1977, she left Rolls Royce to look after her mother and did not return to full-time employment. She joined the CPGB in 1942 and served on the Scottish and national committees of the party. In 1961, she visited the Soviet Union and was impressed by what she saw. That year, she was arrested in a mass sit-down at the Polaris nuclear base at Holy Loch. She left the CP in 1969 and joined the Labour Party, becoming a councillor for Glasgow District Council and subsequently Strathclyde Regional Council during the 1970s. She was the first convener of the Region’s Women’s Committee. Ballroom dancing had long been Agnes McLean’s passion – it allowed her to express herself, though one negative encounter associated with it was the apartheid practised by the US army, which she experienced during the war. In 1993, she went to Cuba to trace the origins of the rumba, resulting in the BAFTA Scotland awardwinning BBC programme, In Cuba They’re Still Dancing. nr

MCLEAN, Agnes,

• NLS: Agnes McLean collection: Papers inc. funeral oration, Jane McKay, 29 April 1994. Duffy Meets, Radio Clyde, 4 April 1989, interview with Agnes McLean; Interview with Agnes McLean by Lesley Dougall, 7 Oct. 1993, for BA (History) Univ. of Strathclyde, 1994; Interview with Marion Robertson, 1994; with Sadie Fulton, 1994 for SOHC, Strathclyde University Archives. Questionnaire returned to author 1994. Braybon, G. and Summerfield, P. (1987) Out of the Cage: women’s experiences in two world wars; Rafeek, N. C. (2008) 

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MCLEHOSE Communist Women in Scotland: Red Clydeside from the Russian Revolution to the End of the Soviet Union. MCLEHOSE (or MacLehose, M’Lehose, Meiklehose), Agnes (‘Clarinda’), n. Craig, born Saltmarket,

Glasgow, 26 April 1758, died Edinburgh 22 Oct. 1841. Correspondent of Robert Burns. Daughter of Christian McLaurin, and Andrew Craig, surgeon. Agnes Craig was the third of four daughters (and possibly one son). Her mother and siblings died before she was 14. An attractive and charming girl, she was voted top of the ‘Toast List of 1773’ at the ‘Glasgow Hodge-Podge Club’, an association for professional men. Worried by this ‘honour’, in 1774 her father sent ‘Pretty Miss Nancy’ to an Edinburgh boarding school. After returning home, she married Glasgow lawyer James McLehose (1752–1812) on 1 July 1776. They had four sons. James McLehose was a violent drunk and she left him in December 1780, returning to her father’s house in the Saltmarket. Her father was very ill and died on 13 May 1782. In August of that year, having recovered custody of her three surviving sons, she moved to Edinburgh where she rented a first-floor flat over General’s Entry, Potterrow. On 4 December 1787, Agnes McLehose met Robert Burns at a soirée given by Miss Erskine Nimmo at Alison Square. They agreed to meet on 8 December, but Burns fell from a carriage before the day and injured his knee, which left him housebound. To pass the time, he began writing letters from his lodgings at 2 St James Square. His first letter to her was on 8 December. Later in December, Agnes suggested using ‘Clarinda’ and ‘Sylvester’ as names in their future correspondence, mainly to protect her reputation in case the letters fell into the wrong hands. Thus began the ‘Sylvander–Clarinda’ correspondence. They finally met on 4 January 1788 when Burns limped his way to her home to keep the belated rendezvous. Six weeks later, on 18 February, Burns left Edinburgh to return home to Mossgiel in Ayrshire and his eventual marriage to *Jean Armour. Agnes McLehose and Burns were to meet again only twice before his death, in March 1788 and on 6 December 1791. It was after this last meeting, as she prepared to leave for Jamaica to salvage her marriage, that Burns penned his immortal poem to her, ‘Ae Fond Kiss’. She neither divorced her husband nor remarried after his death in Jamaica on 16 March

1812. Only one of her four children survived to adulthood and he died two years before her. She is buried in the Canongate Cemetery, Edinburgh. On 22 January 1937, the Clarinda Burns Club dedicated a plaque to her memory near the Potterrow, where her house once stood, but only after q­ uestions had been raised at Westminster as to whether she was of good enough character to receive this honour. Her relationship with Burns had for many years been deemed by some to be immoral, but there is no evidence for anything other than a strong attraction and fondness between the couple. mb • MacLehose, W. C. (1843) The Correspondence of Burns and Clarinda; Ross, J. D. (ed.) (1929) The Poems of Clarinda. Bell, M. (2001) Tae The Lasses; Brown, R. L. (1968) Clarinda; Campsie, A. (1989) The Clarinda Conspiracy; Donald, T. F. (1900) The Hodge-Podge Club; Dunnigan, S. (2009) ‘Burns and Women’ in G. Carruthers (ed.) The Edinburgh Companion to Robert Burns; Hill, J. C. (1961) The Love Songs and Heroines of Robert Burns; ODNB (2004) (see MacLehose, Agnes); O’Rourke, D. (2000) Ae Fond Kiss; Ross, J. D. (1897) Burns’s Clarinda. MCLELLAN, Sadie, m. Pritchard, born Milngavie 25 Oct. 1914, died Nova Scotia 7 Feb. 2007. Stainedglass artist. Daughter of Elizabeth Hannah, and John McLellan, printer. Sadie McLellan graduated with distinction from GSA, where she was taught by Charles Baillie. Holding the John Keppie scholarship, she travelled in Scandinavia between 1936 and 1938, including a year at the Denmark Royal Academy of Art. In 1940 she married fellow artist Walter Pritchard (1905–77) and they had a d ­ aughter. Sadie McLellan’s early work included choirwindows in Glasgow Cathedral, following which the Thistle Foundation commissioned her to design the entire window scheme, based on The Pilgrim’s Process, for the Robin Chapel in Craigmillar, Edinburgh (1953), a memorial to Lieutenant Robin Tudsbery. Inspired by the new medium of dalles de verre (pieces of thick slab glass set into concrete) first seen in France in 1958 in work by Fernand Léger, she pioneered this medium in Scotland, designing windows at Alloa and the Benedictine Priory at Pluscarden, near Elgin, where the ‘contrast in size of [the Great Rose] window with the diminutive artist’ was commented on (The Herald 2007). She and her husband lived and worked in Crawfordjohn, South Lanarkshire, from 1971, and the local museum holds photographs and documents of her work,

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which she continued until 1989, then retiring to live with her daughter in Canada. Sadie McLellan was regarded as an outstanding and uncompromising modern artist in glass, and Hugh McDiarmid’s poem The Terrible Crystal was dedicated to her: ‘Clear thought . . . /Like crystal it concentrates and irradiates light’. KES • Alford, S. (2010) ‘The stained glass of Sadie McLellan’, Journal of Stained Glass, vol. xxx, pp. 151–63; Donnelly, M. (1997) Scotland’s stained glass: making the colours sing; The Herald, 23 Feb. 2007 (obit.). MACLENNAN, Elizabeth Margaret Ross (Liz),‡ m. McGrath, born Glasgow 16 March 1938, died

London 23 June 2015. Actor, writer, co-founder of 7:84 Theatre Company. Daughter of Isabel Adam, public health doctor, and Hector MacLennan, obstetrician and gynaecologist. Liz MacLennan’s upbringing was privileged: Glasgow’s Laurel Bank School, Benenden, and St Hilda’s, Oxford. At university, her theatrical talents developed in revue and plays and after graduating she trained at LAMDA, then launched her career at Dundee Rep. In 1962 she married playwright and director John McGrath (1935– 2002), whom she met at Oxford. They had two sons and a daughter. During the next decade she developed a successful stage and television career. She and her husband were a powerfully creative and politically radical team who, with her brother David, founded 7:84 Theatre Company in 1971. In 1973, with Ferelith Lean, that trio established the separate 7:84 (Scotland) for its renowned first production, The Cheviot, the Stag and the Black, Black Oil. Henceforth Liz MacLennan became an increasingly impressive stage presence, playing leading 7:84 roles, including the heroine in the acclaimed 1982 revival of *Ena Lamont Stewart’s Men Should Weep. Her ensemble work alternated with one-woman plays written by her husband with her collaboration. After his death, she lived between London and Greece, the centre of a close family. Her writing includes a memoir (1990), a children’s book (2009) and poems (2013). Along with her husband, Liz MacLennan radically marked the theatre, especially in Scotland. Their ashes are buried at Rogart in Sutherland, a place they both loved. IB • MacLennan, L. (1990) The Moon Belongs to Everyone, (2009) Ellie and Granny Mac, (2013) The Fish That Winked. The Guardian, 29 June 2015, The Herald, 29 June 2015, The Scotsman, 27 June 2015, The Stage, 7 July 2015 (obits). Personal knowledge.

FRSE, born Kirkhill, Inverness-shire, 15 May 1917, died Edinburgh 13 August 2004. Professor of brewing. Daughter of Margaret Ingram Sangster, and Alasdair MacGillivray MacLeod, United Free Church ­minister. A daughter of the manse, Anna MacLeod had two brothers. She attended Invergordon Academy and Mary Erskine’s School, Edinburgh, where she was dux in 1924. After graduating with first-class honours in botany from the University of Edinburgh in 1939, she taught first at Moray House Training College, then became lecturer at Heriot-Watt College, where she remained until retirement in 1977. While there, she gained her PhD (Edinburgh), published research on barley germination and malting, became Professor of Brewing (1975), and encouraged her postgraduate students. Anna MacLeod was one of the best-known scientists and technologists in the malting, brewing and distilling industries, worldwide. Having been elected FRSE in 1962, she was later editor of the important Journal of the Institute of Brewing, chaired the Institute’s Scottish section in 1966, and became President of the (international) Institute of Brewing in 1970. In 1976, on receiving the Horace Brown Medal, she gave a lecture entitled ‘Rerum Cognoscere Causas’, reflecting her egalitarian view that the people of the world will be better off for knowing how nature works. She received an honorary DSc from Heriot-Watt University in 1993. A respected and successful woman in a male-dominated industry, Anna MacLeod disliked humbug. When asked to explain the differences between beers and Scotch whiskies, she replied: ‘Drink the stuff!’ (water, no ice, with Scotch). gp MACLEOD, Anna MacGillivray,

• The Scotsman, 6 Sept. 2004 (obit.). Personal knowledge. MACLEOD, Catherine (Kitty) (Ceit NicLeòid), m1 MacLennan, m2 Gregson, born Kasauli, India, 4

Sept. 1914, died Haddington 7 May 2000. Singer. Daughter of Anna MacLeod, primary schoolteacher, and Kenneth MacLeod, soldier. Kitty MacLeod was born in India to Lewis parents. Her mother tongue was Gaelic, her second language Urdu, later supplanted by English when the First World War forced repatriation of army families. Her formal education was at Lionel School in Lewis and the University of Edinburgh, but she attributed her remarkable knowledge of the Gaelic language and culture to the ‘taigh ceilidh’ – thatched houses where people gathered to share 285

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tales, legends, history, songs, proverbs, riddles and folklore from oral tradition. At university she outshone fellow students (including Sorley MacLean and Norman MacCaig), winning gold medals for both Celtic and Moral Philosophy. It was as a singer that she made her biggest impact, both for her unique style and her knowledge of Gaelic song traditions (including such songs as the lament of *Anna Campbell). Still a student, she won the Mòd Gold Medal in 1936 and was recorded by Parlaphone Records, which distributed worldwide. She popularised ‘An Aitearachd Ard’ (‘The high swelling of the sea’), arguably the most recorded, frequently requested Gaelic song, and composed and recorded the melody for ‘Oran Chalum Sgaire’. Leading European and North American artists have recorded it, but without credit to her. Kitty MacLeod was featured in Scotland’s first colour film documentary, The Western Isles (1942). Other films included the Hollywood movie Rob Roy (1953) in which she sang and acted with her sister Marietta (d. 1983). Both sisters recorded songs for the School of Scottish Studies in Edinburgh. Kitty MacLeod married twice, first Murdoch Dubh MacLennan from Lewis, and secondly, on 26 February 1998, Ernest Renaud Lewtas Gregson, an Edinburgh doctor. While she dutifully followed a career in school teaching until retirement in 1974, her enduring influence continues far beyond the classroom to traditional singers world-wide; she has been ranked equal to Sorley MacLean in her influence on Gaeldom. m gt b • Bennett, M. ‘The life and songs of Kitty MacLeod’, lecture, Celtic Connections festival, Glasgow, 31 Jan. 2003; ODNB (2004); The Scotsman, 9 May 2000 (obit.). MACLEOD, Fiona

(1856–1932)

see SHARP, Elizabeth Amelia

DBE, m. Walker, born London 3 Feb. 1878, died Ythan Lodge, Aberdeenshire, 4 Nov. 1976. Chief of Clan MacLeod. Daughter of Agnes Mary Cecilia Northcote, and Sir Reginald MacLeod of MacLeod, 27th Chief. Raised in London and Edinburgh, Flora MacLeod also spent time at the family seat, Dunvegan Castle. On 5 June 1901, she married Hubert Walker (1870–1933), correspondent for The Times. The couple had two children. Flora MacLeod was active in voluntary aid and welfare in England; from the 1920s she increasingly

MACLEOD, Flora Louisa Cecilia,

worked in Skye. Sir Reginald MacLeod died in 1935 and Flora succeeded him soon thereafter, being unanimously accepted as the 28th Chief by the Clan MacLeod Society on 17 March 1936. Positive international response to the recently founded Clan MacLeod Magazine inspired her to visualise a world-wide MacLeod community. She spent the early 1950s travelling, inaugurating clan societies in the USA, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. Societies later emerged in France, Germany, and South Africa. As a Chief ‘who lived, thought and felt internationally rather than parochially’, Flora MacLeod ‘gave a new and abiding sense of identity to those proud to bear a Highland name’ (Grant 1981, p. 617). In 1953, Flora MacLeod was made DBE. She spent the next twenty years encouraging preservation of the history, folklore, and genealogy of Clan MacLeod. She lived at Dunvegan until 1972, when she moved to Ythan Lodge to live with a grandson. Dame Flora was buried alongside previous chiefs in the ruins of Duirinish Church, Dunvegan Castle. mes • Grant, I. F. (1981) The MacLeods; Morrison, A. (1986) The Chiefs of Clan MacLeod; The Times, 6 Nov. 1976 (obit.); ODNB (2004); Wolrige Gordon, A. (1974) Dame Flora. MACLEOD, Margaret, Lady Clanranald (‘Lady Clan’), m. MacDonald, born Berneray, Harris, before 1720,

died Ormiclate, South Uist, 9 September 1780. Jacobite. Daughter of Margaret Mackenzie, and William MacLeod 1st of Luscantyre. Little is known about Margaret MacLeod’s life before c. 1720, when she married Ranald MacDonald, ‘Old Clanranald’, 17th Captain of Clanranald and 4th of Benbecula. Lady Clanranald was much loved by her husband’s kinsmen and was affectionately referred to as ‘Lady Clan’. Despite her husband’s outward devotion to the Hanoverian monarchy, Lady Clanranald was dedicated to the Jacobite cause, a loyalty she instilled in her children. Indeed, her son, Ranald MacDonald (‘Young Clanranald’), gathered the Clanranald men at the Raising of the Standard at Glenfinnan on 19 August 1745. Lady Clanranald’s lasting historical contribution came after Culloden. By late June 1746, Charles Edward Stuart had already successfully evaded the Hanoverian troops for two months, hiding in an uninhabited hut on Old Clanranald’s land in South Uist. The net, however, was closing around him. Hugh MacDonald (stepfather of *Flora MacDonald) came up with an escape

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plan: the Prince would travel to Skye as ‘Betty Burke’, Flora MacDonald’s Irish lady’s maid. Lady Clanranald took charge of the preparations, directing the creation of a suitable gown for Charles Edward Stuart and providing food for the crossing. After this adventure, however, and a brief ­imprisonment in Southwark, Lady Clanranald kept a low profile for the rest of her life. mes • Craig, M. (1997) Damn’ Rebel Bitches: the women of the ’45; Douglas, H. (1993) Flora MacDonald: the most loyal rebel; Douglas, Sir R. of Glenbervie (1798) The Baronage of Scotland, p. 392; Grant, I. F. (1963) The Clan Donald; MacKinnon, Rev. Dr. D. and Morrison, A. (1968) The MacLeods – The Genealogy of a Clan, section II, pp. 35–6. Personal communication: Jim Ayars, Associated Clan MacLeod Societies. MACLEOD, Mary see MÁIRI NIGHEAN ALASDAIR RUAIDH (c. 1615–c. 1707) MACMILLAN, Chrystal Jessie,‡ born Edinburgh 13 June 1872, died Edinburgh 21 Sept. 1937. Suffragist, internationalist, barrister. Daughter of Jessie Chrystal Finlayson, and John Macmillan, tea merchant. The family, including Chrystal Macmillan’s eight brothers, lived in Corstorphine Hill House, now the Fellows’ house, Edinburgh Zoo. From 1888, she attended St Leonards School, St Andrews, and in 1892 was among the first women admitted to the University of Edinburgh, where she became the first woman to graduate from the Science faculty, with a first-class degree in Mathematics and Natural Philosophy. Switching to the Faculty of Arts, she graduated in 1900 with an honours degree in Moral and Mental Philosophy. A committed suffragist, she was secretary to the Women Graduates of the Scottish Universities Committee, which argued that members, as graduates, had the right to the parliamentary franchise within the university electorates, which returned four MPs. When their case was rejected by the Court of Session, she and four others raised £1,000 to appeal in November 1908 to the House of Lords, where Chrystal Macmillan, labelled a ‘modern Portia’, acted as senior counsel (AGC, p. 69) and though unsuccessful, generated much publicity and sympathetic support. A hard-working member of NUWW and SFWSS, she campaigned for woman suffrage throughout Scotland and represented Scottish interests on the executive of NUWSS, going on to be secretary of IWSA in 1913. On 31 July 1914,

with Millicent Fawcett and Rosika Schwimmer, she drafted and delivered to the Foreign Secretary and relevant ambassadors in London an international women’s manifesto appealing for conciliation and arbitration. She helped organise the International Congress of Women at The Hague in April 1915, where 1,200 women from 12 countries met to discuss how international disputes could be settled by mediation. Becoming secretary of the International Committee of Women for Permanent Peace, later WILPF, she was one of five envoys who travelled through war-torn Europe, meeting every head of state to encourage a mediated settlement. At the second International Congress of Women in Zurich in May 1919, she was elected to deliver their resolutions criticising the terms of the Versailles Treaty to the victors, meeting in Paris. Chrystal Macmillan campaigned for women to be admitted to the legal profession and, after entering Middle Temple, was herself called to the Bar in January 1924 and practised as a barrister in London and the West of England until 1936. She continued to campaign for women’s rights in Britain and internationally. Protesting against the NUSEC policy of supporting protective employment legislation, she resigned in 1927. As President of Open Door International she lobbied the International Labour Office, challenging international legal restrictions on women’s employment, and advocating equal pay and similar opportunities for training and promotion as male workers. Over many years she campaigned for women’s full right to citizenship, in particular the right of all women, whatever their marital status, to retain or change their nationality. She was the only woman to give evidence to a Westminster Select Committee on the Nationality of Married Women and initiated the campaign for the independent nationality of married women at the League of Nations. She stood, unsuccessfully, as Liberal candidate for Edinburgh North in 1935. She is commemorated in the Chrystal Macmillan Building, University of Edinburgh, named in 2008, which houses the School of Social and Political Sciences. si/hek/jr • MS: Wallace, J. (1996) Standard Grade History Investigation on Chrystal Macmillan, Boroughmuir High School, Edinburgh. AGC; Alberti, J. (1989) Beyond Suffrage: feminists in war and peace; ODNB (2004); Pipes, R. J. (2014) ‘Chrystal Macmillan (1872–1937): a Scotswoman at the Inn’, The Middle Templar, 54; Wiltsher, A. (1985) Most Dangerous Women: Feminist Peace Campaigners of the First World War;

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MCMILLAN WSM; http://dangerouswomenproject.org/2016/03/24/ chrystal-macmillan; http://www.unive.it/media/allegato/dep/ n18-2012/Ricerche/Monografica/08__Kay.pdf MCMILLAN, Margaret, CBE, CH, born Westchester Co., NY, USA, 19 July 1860, died Harrow on the Hill 29 March 1931; MCMILLAN, Rachel, born Westchester Co. 25 March 1859, died Deptford 25 March 1917. Educational and social reformers. Daughters of Jean Cameron, and James McMillan, estate manager. Widowed in 1865, Jean McMillan returned to her parents’ home in Inverness with daughters Margaret and Rachel, who both attended Inverness High School and Academy in the 1870s. Rachel stayed at home to nurse her grandmother until 1888, but Margaret went to Frankfurt-am-Main in 1878 to study music and acting, acquiring there her conviction that ‘oral culture’ and a liberal education were vital for elementary schoolteachers and their pupils. After working as a governess (1879–87), she joined her sister in London in 1889, where they worked as junior superintendents in homes for working girls. Rachel converted Margaret to Christian Socialism, and they joined the Fabian Society, Labour Church, SDF, ILP, and later the Labour Party. Their support for the 1889 London dock strike alienated Margaret’s benefactor, Lady Meux. The McMillan sisters moved to Bradford in the 1890s, invited by the local ILP to campaign for a better physical environment for workingclass youth. Rachel returned south to qualify as a health visitor and hygiene teacher, working in Kent. Margaret remained in Bradford, collaborating on the first medical inspection of elementary schoolchildren in Britain (1893), joining Bradford School Board for the ILP, and becoming first president of Bradford’s Froebel Society (1901). She was notably critical of the narrow training of elementary schoolteachers, comparing them unfavourably to the university-educated Scottish dominie. Rejoining Rachel, she was appointed by the LCC to manage a school group in Deptford (1903–18). Financed by the American philanthropist Joseph Fels, the sisters opened a health clinic in Bow, moving it to Deptford in 1910 to serve several schools. There they also established camps for girls (1911) and boys (1912) aged from six to 14, and a pioneer open air nursery and training centre (incorporating a Mothers’ Club) in 1914. Both camps and the nursery supplied meals as well as garden space and play activities. During the First World

War, the sisters created a nursery for ­munitions workers’ children in Peckham (named after Rachel, who died in 1917). Margaret continued to run the nursery and served on the LCC (1919–22). As president of the NSA (1923), she resigned in 1929 over provision for working-class children. With Conservative MP Nancy Astor, she founded the Rachel McMillan College for training nurses and teachers in Deptford in 1930. A prolific writer and charismatic speaker, Margaret McMillan remained active in Socialist Sunday Schools, the WEA and lecture tours, writing journalism and children’s fiction. Her works on education influenced the 1906 Provision of School Meals Act and the development of school medical inspections. Both sisters had campaigned for female and adult suffrage: Margaret sought to mediate between the WSPU and the ILP in 1907, and campaigned against the ‘Cat and Mouse’ Act (1913). Made CBE in 1917, she became a CH in 1930. The sisters are buried in the same grave and were commemorated by the college and the [Margaret] McMillan Library in Bradford. jm c d • Greenwich Univ. Library: McMillan family and other papers. Jarvis, P. and Liebovich, B. (2015) ‘British Nurseries, head and heart: McMillan, Owen and the genesis of the education/care dichotomy’, Women’s History Review 24 (6) pp. 917–37; Lowndes, G. A. N. (1960) Margaret McMillan; Moriarty, V. (1998) Margaret McMillan; ODNB (2004); Steedman, C. (1990) Childhood, Culture and Class in Britain: Margaret McMillan (Bibl.); WWW (2nd edn. 1967), vol. III, 1929–1940. MCMURTRIE, Mary Margaret, n. Mitchell, born Skene, Aberdeenshire 26 June 1902, died Aberdeenshire 1 Nov. 2003. Artist, plantswoman, historian. Daughter of Jane Philip, and George Mitchell, schoolmaster. Mary Mitchell was one of the first female students of Gray’s School of Art in Aberdeen (DA 1923). After graduating, she married Rev. John McMurtrie, minister of Skene Parish Church. At the Manse, they brought up their four children and restored the garden. After the death of her husband in 1949, Mary McMurtrie started a nursery specialising in alpine and old garden flowers. For 40 years she worked to conserve and distribute Old Pinks and Double Primroses, which she also recorded in her watercolours. She became internationally recognised and acclaimed as one of the best flower painters of her day, never losing sight of a flower’s overall appeal while remaining botanically accurate. She

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was keenly interested in the conservation, buying and restoring of Balbithan House, Aberdeenshire, in the early 1960s. She always researched for authenticity, finding skilled local craftworkers, and her work influenced other restorations in the area. Mary McMurtrie wrote articles for The Scots Magazine, The Countryman, and the Deeside Field Club on local history and the countryside of her youth, and, for The Statistical Account of Scotland, volume 4, she completed the account for the Parish of Skene. She also wrote and illustratedWild Flowers of Scotland (1982) and Scots Roses (1998), as well as the wild flowers, shrubs and trees of the Algarve, Portugal (1973–95, 1997, 1998). She continued to work until her 102nd year, completing Old Cottage Pinks (2004) shortly before her death. eah /emh • RBGE: originals of Scottish Wild Flowers. McMurtrie, M. M., Works as above, and (1973–95) Wild Flowers of the Algarve, vols I–IV; (1997) Shrubs of the Algarve ; (1998) Trees of Portugal; (2001) Scottish Wild Flowers. Alfonso, M. da L. R. and McMurtrie, M. M. (1991) Plantas do Algarve. Beck, C. and Hopkinson, C. (1999) ‘Mary McMurtrie, horticultural who’s who’, Gardens Illustrated, 42; Boyd, P. (2004) ‘Mary McMurtrie, painter of Scots roses’, Historic Rose Journal, 28; Clark, T. (1992–3) ‘Mary McMurtrie, painting and garden conservation’, Historic Garden, Winter; Hellyer, A. G. L. (1978) ‘The gardens of Balbithan House, Kintore’, Country Life, Nov. 1978.

and joined Mabel St Clair Stobart’s hospital unit, first in Brussels, then in Antwerp, as a head orderly. After Antwerp fell in October, she joined a volunteer ambulance unit at Ostend and opened soup kitchens at Furnes and Adinkerke, earning herself the sobriquet of ‘the lady with the soup’ (The Bookman, p. 163). Her account of her time on the Western Front was published as A Woman’s Diary of the War (1915), though the more candid and critical memoir, My War Experiences in Two Continents (1919), was published posthumously. In the summer of 1915, she gave a series of over thirty lectures for the war effort at munitions centres across Britain, although by this time she was ‘personally disillusioned by the war’ (ODNB). Awarded the Belgian Order of Leopold, by October 1915 she was in Russia, again serving the wounded. In early 1916 she moved on to Persia, but her time there was curtailed by the sprue and pernicious anaemia to which she eventually succumbed. Buried at Chart Sutton in Kent, her gravestone reads ‘In the Great War, by Word and Deed, at Home and Abroad, She served her Country even unto Death.’ JEP • Macnaughtan, S., Works as above. The Bookman, 50, Sept. 1916, pp. 162–4; eODNB. MACNEIL, Aithbhreac see AITHBHREAC INGHEAN COIRCEADAIL (fl. 1470)

m. MacInnes, MBE, born Leideag, Isle of Barra 6 Oct. 1928, died Glasgow 15 May 2015. Traditional Gaelic singer. Daughter of Annie Gillies, and Seamus MacNeil, fisherman. Immersed in a rich oral tradition of Gaelic songs and stories from birth, Flora MacNeil ‘soaked up’ hundreds of songs, particularly from her mother, and her aunt, Mary Gillies. Aged 19, she went to Edinburgh to work in the telephone exchange and began to perform regularly. In 1951 she sang at the Festival of Britain exhibition, and at the first People’s Festival of Edinburgh; thereafter her reputation soared. Following her return to Barra to run the telephone exchange, she met Alister MacInnes, a Glasgow solicitor. They married in 1955 and settled in Glasgow, raising five children. Flora MacNeil’s natural voice, traditional songs and style of delivery set her apart from the more formal styles of the day. Her songs, she said, were ‘from another world, a world that had passed’, with a value beyond measure. She performed in Europe and the Americas, recording three solo albums and appearing on TV and radio. In 1992 she was

MACNEIL, Flora,‡ MACNAUGHTAN, Sarah Broom, born

Partick, Lanarkshire 26 Oct. 1864, died London 24 July 1916. War worker and writer. Daughter of Julia Blackman, and Peter Macnaughtan, shipping company secretary. Educated at home and with private means, Sarah Macnaughtan travelled widely across Europe, the Near and Far East, to North and South America and Egypt. In the 1890s she established herself as a writer of popular fiction, her first short story, ‘Tom Cophetua’, appearing in Temple Bar in 1894. She later published thirteen novels including Selah Harrison (1898), The Fortune of Christina M’Nab (1901), and A Lame Dog’s Story (1905). ‘Intensely alive, and intensely interested in all the life around her’ (The Bookman, p. 162), she channelled her energies not only into writing, but also into aiding the sick and wounded in conflicts in the Balkans in the 1890s and in South Africa during the Second Anglo-Boer War, as a Red Cross volunteer. On the outbreak of the First World War, Sarah Macnaughtan undertook district nursing ­training

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awarded an MBE, and in 2005 was inducted into the Scots Traditional Music Awards Hall of Fame. She was also Honorary Fellow of Sabhal Mòr Ostaig (UHI), receiving the Sàr Ghàidheal (Exceptional Gael) award (2010), and Honorary Fellow of the ASLS (2014). Flora MacNeil passed on her songs to her daughter, singer and harp player Maggie MacInnes, and to many other singers who have been inspired by her singing and her songs. MM aci • MacNeil, F., albums: Flora, Caledonian Music Co.; Craobh nan Ubhal (1976 and 1993), Orain Flòraidh (2000), both Temple Records. The Guardian, 20 May 2015, The Scotsman, 19 May 2015 (obits). Personal knowledge.

MBE, born Holm, Orkney, 26 March 1885, died Edinburgh, 22 Feb. 1973. Writer and folklorist, cultural and political activist. Daughter of Janet Dewar, and Rev. Daniel McNeill, Minister of Holm West United Free Church. One of three daughters, ‘Flos’ McNeill grew up in Orkney and was educated at Kirkwall Burgh School and the University of Glasgow, where she was part of a lively student community that included the future playwright ‘James Bridie’ (O. H. Mavor) and future politicians James Maxton and Walter Elliot. She graduated in 1912 and for a time taught English in schools for girls in France and Germany. She was organiser for the SFWSS 1912–13, and secretary of the Association for Moral and Social Hygiene in London, 1913–17. She was part of the literary and cultural revival movement in Scotland, working as a researcher and, from 1929, principal assistant on the Scottish National Dictionary. That year saw the publication of her most popular book, The Scots Kitchen; its success encouraged her to work full-time as an author and journalist (writing as F. Marian McNeill). She was a founder member of Scottish PEN and became a vice-president of the recently formed Scottish National Party in the 1930s. She founded the Clan MacNeill Association of Scotland in 1932 and from 1944 to 1945 was a member of the Scottish Secretary of State’s Advisory Committee on Rural Housing. She lived mainly in Edinburgh but counted among her recreations Gaelic music and travelling in the Highlands and Islands. As a writer Marian McNeill is now best remembered for The Scots Kitchen and for her fourvolume study of Scottish folklore, The Silver Bough

MCNEILL, Florence Marian,

(1957–68). She also had ambitions to be a novelist and her correspondence with *Catherine Carswell demonstrates the struggle and determination that eventually produced the semi-autobiographical The Road Home (1932). Her correspondence with others involved in the Scottish cultural revival is a legacy of equal significance with her published writings and public activities, giving a first-hand account of Scottish affairs in the inter-war period. She was also at the centre of a lively correspondence among women friends which offers insight into the difficulties women experienced in their attempts to balance a domestic role with public writing ambitions. Letters to her demonstrate her friends’ warm appreciation of her kindnesses and consideration. In 1962, she was made MBE for services to Scottish culture. It seems that in her later years, ‘her fortunes as an author waned, and when she died in 1973 she was in sadly constrained and lonely circumstances’ (Sanderson 1989, p.xi). mpm • NLS: F. Marian McNeill archive; Willa and Edwin Muir corr. McNeill, F. M., Works as above, and (1920) Iona: a history of the island, (1956, 1992) The Scots Cellar, (1998) The Silver Bough (vol. 1), S. Sanderson, ed. and intro. Carswell, C. (1950, 1997) Lying Awake: an unfinished autobiography and other posthumous papers, J. Carswell, ed. and intro.; Cruickshank, H. (1976) Octobiography; HSWW (Bibl.); ODNB (2004); Royle, T. (1993) Mainstream Companion to Scottish Literature ; SB. MACNICOL, Elizabeth (Bessie), m. Frew, born Glasgow 15 July 1869, died Glasgow 4 June 1904. Painter. Daughter of Mary Ann Matthews, and Peter MacNicol, schoolmaster. Bessie MacNicol had a supportive and affectionate family background, though marked by the deaths of four siblings, including her twin sister, in early childhood. She studied at the GSA under Fra Newbery (1887–93, see Glasgow Girls), and at the Académie Colarossi in Paris in 1893–4. The next year, she exhibited A French Girl at the Glasgow Institute, and began to receive public acclaim. In 1896, Bessie MacNicol visited the artists’ community at Kirkcudbright, where she began a friendship with E. A. Hornel, whom she painted. Her letters to him are among the few records, other than her paintings, which survive. Her work was for a while influenced by him, and her use of colour and textures is closely related to the Glasgow Boys. She was not afraid to work in areas considered more suitable for men, as in her nude painting, Vanity (1902). She also painted many costume pieces, the first of

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which was A Girl of the ’Sixties (1898). In 1899, she married Alexander Frew (1861–1908), gynaecologist and painter. Bessie MacNicol used the studio at the back of their Glasgow house to create larger-scale paintings. By this time she had built up a considerable reputation and had ­exhibited in Germany, Austria, Russia and the USA. She died in childbirth, aged only 34. fj • Broughton House Collection, Kirkcudbright: Correspondence. Burkhauser, J. (ed.) (1990) Glasgow Girls; Glasgow Herald, 7 June 1904 (obit.); Macmillan, D. (1990) Scottish Art 1460–1990; MSW; ODNB (2004); Tanner, A. (1998) Bessie MacNicol, New Woman. MACPHAIL, Katherine Stewart, OBE, born Coatbridge 30 Oct. 1887, died St Andrews 21 Sept. 1974. Doctor. Daughter of Jessie Edmonstone Mitchell, and Donald Macphail, GP. Not long after qualifying MBChB (Glasgow, 1911), Katherine Macphail joined a *Scottish Women’s Hospital Unit in wartime Serbia, where she found wounded men dying of gangrene, paratyphoid, enteric fever and typhus. Invalided out herself with typhus, she rejoined the defeated Serbs, then after brief internment, accompanied the Serb Refugee Relief Unit to Corsica and Salonika. At the end of the war, she attended refugee women and children in Macedonia, returning to Belgrade after the Armistice to help fight a typhus epidemic. There she opened a hospital for sick street children in a disused army hut, using her own money before support came from the newly founded Save the Children Fund. By 1934, 170,000 children had been treated in what had become the first children’s hospital in Yugoslavia. Katherine Macphail later built a specialist home for children with tubercular diseases of the bones and joints, which was closed in 1941 when Yugoslavia was again invaded and she herself was interned. She worked for two years in Lanarkshire, then in 1944 returned with UNRRA to reopen the children’s hospital, which she handed over to the new Communist government in 1947. so

• Krippner, M. (1980) The Quality of Mercy; Leneman, L. (1998) In the Service of Life ; Mikic, D. J. (2007) Ever Yours Sincerely: the life and work of Dr Katherine S. MacPhail (tr. M. Hemmell); Wilson, F. (1944) In the Margins of Chaos; www.scottishwomenshospitals.co.uk MACPHERSON, Annie Parlane, born Campsie, Stirlingshire, 2 June 1825, died 27 Nov. 1904. Social

worker, pioneer of child migration. Daughter of Helen Edwards, and James Macpherson, shoemaker, teacher. Educated at the Home and Colonial Training College in London, Annie Macpherson undertook evangelical mission work in the East End and in Cambridge. She established her first orphanage in Spitalfields in 1864, then became convinced that emigration was the answer. In 1870, she accompanied a party of 100 boys to Canada, settling them on farms in Quebec and Ontario. Further receiving homes were acquired at Belleville, Galt and Knowlton, and from 1870 to 1920 more than 14,000 children were brought to Canada. Recruits were trained in a London home opened by Lord Shaftesbury, being taught marketable skills while their supervised passage and relocation was being arranged. Annie Macpherson’s sisters, Rachel Merry and Louisa Birt, were respectively involved with British receiving centres and Canadian distributing homes, and her pioneering, though not uncontroversial, work provided the theoretical rationale and practical model for Thomas Barnardo, William Quarrier and other like-minded evangelicals. Through a chance meeting in Toronto, Annie Macpherson also inspired the founding, back in Edinburgh, by William and Margaret Blaikie (1823–1915) of Mrs Blaikie’s Orphan and Emigration Home in 1872, but this home closed in 1892, partly because of questionable recruiting methods, partly because of duplication of effort with that of *Emma Stirling. mdh • Univ. of Liverpool, Social Work Archives: D715/1–2, Committee Minute Books, 1873–1933; D715/3–4, Annual Reports, 1873–1907; D715/5–15, Miscellaneous, 1903–73. Macpherson, A. (1866) The Little Matchbox-Makers, (1870) Canadian Homes for London Wanderers. Birt, L. M. (1913) The Children’s Home Finder ; Blaikie, W. G. (1901) An Autobiography: ‘Recollections of a Busy Life’; Harper, M. (1992) ‘Halfway to heaven or hell on earth? Canada’s Scottish child immigrants’, in C. Kerrigan (ed.) The Immigrant Experience, pp. 165–83; Harper, M. (2003) Adventurers and Exiles; ODNB (2004); Wagner, G. (1982) Children of the Empire. http://ist.uwaterloo.ca/~marj/genea​ logy/children/Organizations/anniem.html MACPHERSON, Margaret Hope, n. MacLean, born Colinton 29 June 1908, died Portree 21 Oct. 2001. Crofter, author, political activist. Daughter of Sheena Macaulay, and Norman MacLean, ­minister. Margaret MacLean was educated in Edinburgh. After marrying Duncan MacPherson, a crofter

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from The Braes on Skye, she moved to the Highlands, where she raised her family of seven sons. In the 1960s, she became a writer of children’s fiction, often inspired by Highland culture and history. Her fictional account of the 1880s Land War, The Battle of the Braes (1970), draws on her family’s long-standing connections with The Braes area, where her grandfather was schoolmaster during the crofters’ rebellion. Her deep concern for the crofting districts was translated into local politics. A long-time member of the Labour Party, she sat on Inverness-shire County Council ­(1945–9), and was secretary of the Skye Labour Party (1961–84). In 1951, her knowledge of the Highlands’ socio-economic situation earned her a place on the Commission of Enquiry into Crofting Conditions. In a note of dissent to the final report, Margaret MacPherson expressed her disillusion with its conclusions, arguing that it ‘did not go far enough to remedy the evils of which we had all become aware’ (Report 1954, p. 89). Known as the ‘First Lady of Crofting’, she believed that the cause of the crofting problem lay in private ownership, and remained strongly opposed to crofters’ purchasing their own holdings, preferring the notion of ­community ­ownership. lg

his dying kinsman, her brother-in-law Murdoch Maclaine. Macquarie proposed marriage in March 1805, postponed until he returned from military service in India. They had an Anglican wedding in November 1807 in Holsworthy, Devon, where Elizabeth Campbell worked as a governess. Posted to Perth garrison, in September 1808 she gave birth to a daughter, who died in December that year; after a number of miscarriages, she had a son, Lachlan, in March 1814. Marriage to a colonial governor enabled Elizabeth Macquarie to contribute to the imperial project not only through the expected philanthropic work among poor colonists and indigenous people, but also in developing both the built environment and agriculture, as well as what became Sydney’s Botanic Gardens. She encouraged the controversial emancipist policy towards former convicts (treating them as social equals to free settlers), which led to the governor’s resignation. They returned to Britain in 1822 and his Mull estate in 1823, which she renovated. After her husband’s death in 1824 she successfully sought government acknowledgement of his work in Australia, where she received public recognition as a landscape gardener and architectural designer. jm c d

• MacPherson, M., Work as above, and (1963) Shinty Boys, (1965) The Rough Road, (1967) Ponies on Hire, (1968) The New Tenants, (1972) The Boy on the Roof, (1985) ‘Crofters and the Crofters’ Commission’ in Land and the People, Scottish Socialist Society. Gouriévidis, L. (2010) The Dynamics of Heritage: history, memory and the Highland Clearances; Report of the Commission of Enquiry into Crofting Conditions, 1954.

• Walsh, R. (ed.) (2011) In Her Own Words: the writings of Elizabeth Macquarie. Barnard, M. (2006) ‘Macquarie, Elizabeth Henrietta (1778–1835)’, ADB; Cohen, L. (1979) Elizabeth Macquarie: her life and times; Karskens, G. (2010) The Colony: a history of early Sydney.

MACPHERSON, Mary

(c. 1740–c. 1815) MACPHERSON, Mary

(1821–98)

see CLARK, Mary see MÀIRI MHÒR NAN ÒRAN

n. Campbell, born Appin, Argyllshire 13 June 1778, died Mull, 17 March 1835. Wife of Lachlan Macquarie, governor of New South Wales and Van Diemen’s Land (Tasmania) 1810–21, and landscape gardener. Daughter of Jane Campbell of Stonefield, and John Campbell of Airds. Youngest of five children of landowning gentry, Elizabeth Campbell had a conventional education in ladylike accomplishments in London. She met Lachlan Macquarie (1762–1864), a widower, in June 1804 on Mull when he visited

MACQUARIE, Elizabeth Henrietta,

fl. 1318–50. Dispossessed heiress and religious patron. Daughter of Ruairi MacRuairi of Garmoran. Amy MacRuairi married her third cousin, John MacDonald of Islay (d. c. 1387), chief of Clan Donald. Although their marriage was legitimate in Gaelic eyes, the couple had it confirmed by papal dispensation in 1337. Amy’s brother Ranald MacRuairi, who in 1318 had succeeded his father in the Clan Ruairi lordship of Garmoran, despite the objections of his aunt *Christiana MacRuairi, was assassinated in 1346. Amy MacRuairi inherited the Clan Ruairi territories and titles, consolidating the two lineages and creating a focus for both Gaelic and Scottish political ambition. In circumstances which remain obscure, Amy MacRuairi and her three sons were systematically dispossessed of much of their land and power: her marriage was annulled in 1350

MACRUAIRI, Amy,

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so that John MacDonald could marry Margaret, daughter of Robert Stewart, heir to the throne. He ­continued to exercise lordship over Amy MacRuairi’s lands and in 1372 his father-in-law, now Robert II, granted him Garmoran. In 1373, John granted Garmoran to Amy’s eldest son, Ranald, but his other lands and titles went to the eldest son of his second marriage, Donald, Robert II’s grandson. Tradition relates that Amy MacRuairi took to religious life and patronage: the oratory known as the Temple of St Michael in Grimsay, North Uist, and the castles of Borve, Benbecula and Tiorim, Moidart, are all ascribed to her. She is reputedly buried in Iona, where an Order of Benedictine nuns had been founded by *Bethoc, daughter of Somerled, her ancestor. cgp

• Barrow, G. W. S. (1988) Robert Bruce; Brown, M. (2004) The Wars of Scotland 1214–1371; Duncan, A. A. M. (ed.) (1988) The Acts of Robert I; McDonald, R. A. (1997) The Kingdom of the Isles. Additional information: R. A. McDonald, Steve Boardman.

DBE, born Edinburgh 22 Sept. 1846, died Wendover, Bucks., 13 Feb. 1941. Campaigner for women’s education and rights. Daughter of Elizabeth Harriot Siddons, and Arthur Mair, army major and town councillor. Sally Mair lived all her life in Edinburgh’s New Town. She was the great-grand-daughter of the actor Sarah Siddons, and grand-daughter of the actor-theatre manager *Harriet Murray (see Siddons), and Henry Siddons, who managed the Theatre Royal in Edinburgh. The family enjoyed the growing city’s advantages and were proud of their theatrical and literary connections. In 1865, at the age of 18, Sally Mair founded the Edinburgh Essay Society – a young ladies’ literary circle that evolved into the influential Ladies’ Edinburgh Debating Society (1865–1935). When it began there were no women on school boards or town councils, in university or Parliament. The group acted as a seedbed of reforming activity, its members active in causes throughout Scotland. Their focus was broadly literary and educational, but became more social and political over time. A magazine of stories, poetry and non-fiction, The Attempt, became The Ladies’ Edinburgh Magazine, edited by Sarah Mair, with Helen Reid (d. 1895), daughter of its publisher Reid & Son. The society’s work was, unusually, recorded by the daughter of one of its early members, Lettice Milne Rae. Meeting weekly on Saturday mornings to debate a range of formally chosen topics, it had around 100 members. Probably more than 600 women were members over its duration. For many it was valuable training for further education and public life. Sally Mair was admired as its leader and as a gifted speaker. She was also one of the founders of the Edinburgh Association for the University Education of Women, St George’s School and Training College, and Masson Hall. In 1906, she became president of ENSWS and in 1910 president of the SFSS. With *Elsie Inglis, she proposed the formation of the *Scottish Women’s Hospitals. After 1918, she was honorary president of the ENSEC, and vice-president of EWCA. She was awarded an honorary doctorate by the University

MAIR, Sarah Elizabeth Siddons (Sally),

• Boardman, S. (1996) The Early Stewart Kings; Brown, M. (2004) The Wars of Scotland 1214–1371; Steer, K. A. and Bannerman, J. (1977) Late Medieval Monumental Sculpture in the West Highlands; ‘The Book of Clanranald’ in A. Cameron (1894) Reliquiae Celticae ; MacDonald, A. and MacDonald A. (1896–1904) The Clan Donald. MACRUAIRI, Christiana (of the Isles, of Mar), fl. 1290–1318. Kinswoman and supporter of Robert I. Daughter of Isabella (?), and Alan MacRuairi of Garmoran. Christiana MacRuairi had two half-brothers, but was sole legitimate heir of Alan MacRuairi, chief of Clan Ruairi and lord of Garmoran which included large parts of the western Highlands and Islands. Her mother, probably the Isabella noted as Alan’s widow in 1293, may have been Robert Bruce’s aunt or cousin. Her Bruce links increased when she married in the 1290s Duncan of Mar son of Donald, Earl of Mar, and brother of Isabel of Mar (see Elizabeth de Burgh), Robert’s wife. Although the couple gave homage to Edward I as Scotland’s ruler in 1296, Christiana of the Isles raised men to help Robert’s bid for the throne in 1306/7. In 1309, King Robert confirmed Christiana’s resignation of Garmoran to her half-brother Ruairi MacRuairi, probably a family attempt to keep it in the MacRuairi male line. If Ruairi had no male heirs, her son Ruairi would succeed. If neither had heirs, it would return to Christiana. Ruairi MacRuairi’s son Ranald succeeded him in 1318, despite Christiana MacRuairi’s attempts to grant the lands to Arthur Campbell. Garmoran later passed to her niece, *Amy MacRuairi. Her patronage of Inchaffray Abbey, favoured by Robert I, showed her continuing Bruce connections. EE

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of Edinburgh (1920) for her work for women’s higher education. Made DBE in 1931, at the age of 95, she was still active in women’s causes. In 1936 she wrote: ‘I have watched, and, to a small extent shared in . . .The Awakening of Women’ (Rae, 1936, p. 7). si • Hamilton, S. (1987) ‘Women and the Scottish universities c. 1869–1939: a social history’, PhD, Univ. of Edinburgh; Kelman, K. A. (2002) ‘Female “self culture” in Edinburgh: the Ladies’ Edinburgh Debating Society’, PhD, Queen Margaret Univ. College, Edinburgh; ODNB (2004); Rae, L. M. (1936) Ladies in Debate ; SB. MAIREARAD NIGHEAN LACHLAINN, born Mull c. 1660. Clan Maclean poet. Mairearad nighean Lachlainn may not have been a Maclean by birth. The evidence points to one parent being a Maclean, the other a Clanranald MacDonald. Some traditions state that Mairearad was married with children but that her children all predeceased her. She composed several poems, mainly concerned with the diminishing power of the Clan Maclean under the leadership of Sir John Maclean, which eventually led to the clan losing the Isle of Mull. Her most famous work is her lament for Sir John Maclean, ‘Gaoir nam ban Muileach’ (The Cry of the Mull Women). She is reputed to have been buried face downwards, as was her contemporary *Màiri nighean Alasdair Ruaidh. af

• O’Baoill, C. (ed.) (2009) Mairghread nighean Lachlainn: song-maker of Mull. Black, R. (ed.) (2001) An Lasair, pp. 60–72; The Celtic Review, Oct. 1911, p. 200; Maclean Sinclair, A. (1898) Na Bàird Leathanach, vol. 1; (1892) The Gaelic Bards from 1715 to 1765; MacGill-eain, S. (1985) Ris a’ Bhruthaich, W. Gillies (ed.), p. 162; Thomson, D. S. (1974) An Introduction to Gaelic Poetry, p. 141. MÀIRI MHÒR NAN ÒRAN (Màiri nighean Iain Bhàin/ Mary MacPherson), born Sgèabost, Isle of Skye,

10 March 1821, died Portree, 7 Nov. 1898. Poet. Daughter of Flòraidh Nèill MhicAonghais (Flora MacInnis), and Iain Bàn MacAonghais Oig (John MacDonald), crofter. Màiri nighean Iain Bhàin became known throughout the Highlands and Islands as Màiri Mhòr nan Òran (‘Great Mary of the Songs’) as a result of her popular compositions which captured the hearts of Highland people and gave voice to the land agitations of the 19th century. Her early life was spent in Skye. Sometime around 1843–5, she began her married life with Isaac Mac a’Phearsain

(d. 1871) in Inverness. She is said to have had seven children, although records show only six. In 1871, she was widowed; the need for employment led to a series of events pushing her forward into the public eye, despite great personal difficulties. In 1872, Màiri Mhòr was employed in Inverness as a nurse to the family of Captain Turner, Royal Engineers. Upon his wife’s death, she was accused of theft and was sentenced to 40 days’ imprisonment. By her own account and other traditional accounts she was innocent; however, in her own words, ‘Se na dh’fhulaing mi de thàmailt a thug mo bhàrdachd beò’ (‘My suffering brought life to my poetry’) (Meek 1977, p. 9). Her subsequent compositions reflect both her own personal straits and those of her contemporary Highlanders. Màiri Mhòr continued her nursing career with further training and moves to Glasgow and Greenock. The lively Highland community of the time provided opportunities to popularise her works and she became the foremost poet of the Highland Land Reform Association, known as the Highland Land League. Through the Land League her songs became known throughout the Highlands and Islands, while the associated political movement provided opportunities for travel. Upon retirement she returned to Sgèabost, and died after a short illness in 1898 in Portree. She was interred in Chapel Yard, Inverness, alongside her husband. She left a legacy of poetry notable as commentary of the time, expressed in clear language imbued with symbolism drawn from the land and history. In 2002, Highland Council established the Mary MacPherson Gaelic Song Fellowship (Caidreachas òrain Gaìdhlig Màiri Mhòr) for the research and development of Gaelic song. abm • Màiri Mhòr nan Òran, Greentrax Recordings CDTRAX 070. ECSWW; Meek, D. E. (1977) ‘Gaelic poets of the land agitation’, Trans. Gael. Soc. Inverness, 41, (1977) Màiri Mhòr nan Òran (Bibl.); MacLean, S. (1962) ‘The poetry of the Clearances’, Trans. Gael. Soc. Inverness, 38; ODNB (2004) (see MacPherson, Mary); Thomson, D. (1974) An Introduction to Gaelic Poetry. MÀIRI NIGHEAN ALASDAIR RUAIDH (Mary MacLeod)

born Rodel, Harris c. 1615, buried Rodel c. 1707. Poet. Daughter of a kinswoman of the MacDonalds of Clan Ranald, and Alexander Roy MacLeod. Màiri nighean Alasdair Ruaidh (she would not have recognised the English version of her name), 294

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scion of an aristocratic family, had connections with the island of Berneray, Harris, and the castle of Dunvegan in Skye. Her poetry mainly addresses leading men of the Clan MacLeod. Her exact position in Dunvegan is unclear. Some say she enjoyed privileges similar to those of an official bard, yet for a time after 1660 she was compelled to leave Dunvegan. This, tradition explains, was because, as a nursemaid, her overweening praise of the children might bring ill luck. Others suggest that composing panegyrics was the exclusive prerogative of male poets: Mairi was exiled for usurping their position. The most plausible explanation is political. Acts of the Lowland parliament that singled out bards for fomenting unrest culminated in the Statutes of Iona in 1609; the MacLeod chief had been a signatory and his successors were influenced by the edict. In Berneray, Sir Norman MacLeod, son of the Clan chief, gave her a house near his own. Sir Norman was a patron of learning and Màiri benefited from the cultural environment. At her own behest she was buried face down ‘beul nam breug a chur foidhpe’ (with her lying mouth undermost) (Watson 1934, p. xix). It is unlikely that this gesture was intended as poetic justice for daring to compose a type of poetry reserved for males. Rather, she regretted the fulsome praise she had bestowed on her patrons, one of whom had rewarded her with exile. Màiri nighean Alasdair Ruaidh was essentially a praisesinger whose reputation is based on her innovations to the imagery and metrical structures of traditional vernacular oral verse. She was a leading representative of a movement of resurgence in song-poetry at a time when written Classical Gaelic was falling into disuse. jm ac i • O’Baoill, C. (ed.) (2014) Mairi nighean Alasdair Ruaidh: song-maker of Skye and Berneray; Watson, J. C. (ed.) [1934] (1965) Gaelic Songs of Mary MacLeod. ECSWW; Matheson, W. (1951–2) ‘Notes on Mary MacLeod (1) her Family Connections (2) her Forgotten Songs’ Trans. Gael. Soc. Inverness, 41; ODNB (2004). MAITLAND, Mary (Marie), born before 1586, died 1596. Manuscript owner and poet. Daughter of Mariota Cranstoun, and Sir Richard Maitland of Lethington, poet and courtier. Mary Maitland exemplifies the role that Scottish Renaissance women of the aristocratic and upper middle classes played in the composition, creation, and transcription of literary manuscripts. She is associated with the manuscript volume known as the Maitland Quarto, a

substantial collection of Scottish poems, social, moral, political, and amatory in nature, from the period c. 1550–86. Her signatures, and the date 1586, appear on the flyleaf, denoting possible ownership, but also implying that she may have transcribed, and even composed, some poetry. Her text suggests that it served as a family commonplace book, both celebration and commemoration of the distinguished Maitland family. An early editor even suggested that Mary Maitland was a kind of Miltonic daughter, helping her aged father in his own literary pursuits. In the same year that the book was completed, she married Alexander Lauder (d. c. 1622), heir to Sir William Lauder of Hatton. Her son George Lauder became a political and military poet. Mary Maitland’s creative influence may be detected in the presence of several female-voiced lyrics, such as the translation of a French poem about an unhappily married woman. The extraordinary poem of erotic and spiritual love between women, ‘As phebus bricht’, invites speculation whether she herself was the author of this and other anonymous poems, for the convention of anonymity in a manuscript collection was frequently ‘exploited’ by a female transcriber. Several lyrics are directly addressed to Mary Maitland. One playfully puns on her name, ‘Marie thocht in this wod did appeir/mait land and gold scho gave aboundantlie’. In this visionary poem, ‘Marie’ appears to the dreamer in a beautiful garden, signifying virtue and chastity. The lyric simply inscribed ‘to your self ’ celebrates Mary Maitland as part of a triumvirate of female poets, alluding to the poetic crown of immortality which will be hers once the labour of the book’s compilation is complete. The specific allusion to ‘sapphic songe’ implies that she is being praised for her gifts as a lyricist and, given the Renaissance understanding of Sappho, strengthens her association with the lyric of female eroticism. The manuscript richly suggests the scope and nature of women’s creative role in Renaissance manuscript compilation, even if it does not resolve all the questions it provokes. sd • Pepys Library, Cambridge: PL 1408. Craigie, W. A. (ed.) (1919–27) The Maitland Folio Manuscript; Martin, J. (ed.) (2015) The Maitland Quarto; HSWW; Newlyn, E. S. (2004) ‘A methodology for reading against the culture: anonymous, women poets, and the Maitland Quarto Manuscript (c. 1586)’, in S. M. Dunnigan et al. (eds) Woman and the Feminine in Medieval and Early Modern Scottish Writing ; *ODNB (2004); SP; Traub, V.

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n. Laing, born Forres, probably 1847, died Dollar 2 Nov. 1920. Councillor, campaigner, Provost, 1913–19. Daughter of Janet Kynoch, and Alexander Laing, tinsmith and ironmonger. Lavinia Laing’s family in Forres included merchants and craftworkers: her maternal grandfather was Provost (1848–55), her father a councillor. Both families were Liberals and United Presbyterians, and Lavinia inherited their radical outlook and commitment to public service. In 1883, when she married Richard Malcolm (1840–1926), she was a schoolteacher in Edinburgh, but moved to Dollar where her husband was a master at Dollar Academy, founded in 1818. By the 1880s, there were some 800 scholars and the Malcolms accommodated boarders at their home. Their only son, Richard, died in 1895: thereafter, Lavinia Malcolm became a leading figure in the Clackmannan and Kinross Women’s Liberal Association, and a dedicated campaigner for the extension of the parliamentary vote. Both Malcolms were active in local government, Richard Malcolm serving as burgh Provost (1896–9). In 1907, the Liberal Government allowed women to stand as councillors in burgh and county elections. Lavinia Malcolm was the only successful woman candidate, returned unopposed for both the town and parish councils of Dollar. In 1909, she was elected to the local school board and in 1913 became Provost of the burgh, in slightly unusual circumstances (the serving Provost and others having resigned during a controversy over the new town hall). She remained Provost until 1919, her term extended because of the war, and by the time of her death in 1920 had achieved further recognition as one of the first women to attend the Convention of Scottish Burghs and to be appointed JP. Scotland’s first female civic leader, Lavinia Malcolm strongly identified herself as a role model for others, arguing that women should take up public service opportunities, to show that they were sufficiently responsible to play an equal part in parliamentary affairs. IEM

MALCOLM, Lavinia,

• Douglas, R. (1934) The Annals of the Royal Burgh of Forres; Hollis, P. (1987) Ladies Elect: women in English local government, 1865–1914; ODNB (2004) (Bibl.); Glasgow Herald, 6, 7 Nov. 1907, 11 Nov. 1913, 3 Nov. 1920 (obit.); The Scotsman, 3 Nov. 1920 (obit.); WoM.

born Edinburgh 6 Sept. 1910, died Edinburgh 29 Sept. 2000. College principal, educator, priest, equality campaigner. Daughter of Jane Clark, former telegraphist in the Civil Service, and John Malloch, accountant. The oldest of four children, Elizabeth Malloch was educated at James Gillespie’s School, Edinburgh Ladies’ College and the University of Edinburgh, graduating MA with first-class honours in French and Latin, then DipEd alongside primary and secondary teaching qualifications from Moray House. Following teaching posts in Manchester, in 1942 she joined the staff of Bingley College of Education and by 1947 was an Inspector of Schools for Leeds. Appointed in 1949 as the first principal of County of Stafford Training College, later Madeley College of Education, she steered it through twenty years of growth and significant innovations, including a qualification for mature teachers of home economics and a specially timed course for married women. Elizabeth Malloch retired to Essex. An active Soroptimist and Open University tutor, she renewed her Christian faith and in 1972 became pastoral assistant and reader in her local parish. In 1980 she returned to Edinburgh and undertook lay leadership roles at St Mary’s Episcopal Cathedral before being ordained deacon (1986). In 1994 she was the oldest among the first women in the Scottish Episcopal Church to be ordained priest. Believing in the equality of all before God, she was an energetic member of the Movement for Whole Ministry, which challenged the church to be more inclusive, and volunteered for the anti-racist YWCA Roundabout Centre, through which she became home tutor of English and adoptive ‘grandmother’ to an Edinburgh Sikh family. HH

MALLOCH, Elizabeth Gilmour,‡

• Directory 1999/2000, Scottish Episcopal Church, p. 194; The Scotsman, 16 Oct. 2000 (obit.).

n. Stewart, born Polmaddie, East Renfrewshire, 2 July 1889, died Greenock 21 March 1964. Councillor and MP. Daughter of Annie Morrison, and William Stewart, ironmoulder. Jean Stewart attended Kinning Park School and Bellahouston Academy before training in accountancy. In 1908, she married William Lawrence Mann (1878–1958), chair of the Rothesay ILP branch, and went to live and work on the island of Bute. The couple had five children. She became ILP branch secretary and stood unsuccessfully for the Rothesay Town Council in 1923 and 1924. After moving to

MANN, Janet (Jean),

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Glasgow she was elected to Glasgow Corporation for Provan in 1931 and served until 1938. She became a bailie (1934), a senior bailie (1937–8) and eventually chair of the Magistrates’ Committee. She also took an active interest in housing issues as convener of the city’s Housing Committee between 1935 and 1938, organising secretary of the Town and Country Planning Association (Scotland) and a member of the Housing Advisory Council of the Secretary of State for Scotland. She favoured lowrise council housing. In the 1931 and 1935 General Elections she stood unsuccessfully as the ILP candidate for West Renfrewshire. Parliamentary success came in 1945 when she was returned as Labour MP for Coatbridge, a constituency she represented at Westminster until 1959 (together with Airdrie after 1950). In Parliament she continued her interest in housing and other areas of social concern, largely those affecting women in working-class households. From 1953 to 1958 she was on the NEC of the Labour Party as an independent right-winger and was active on its policy sub-committee on housing. In 1958, the year in which her husband died, she resigned from the NEC and did not stand for re-election in the General Election of the following year. However, she was a councillor for Gourock from 1958 to 1964. A backbencher throughout her parliamentary career, she attended a great many foreign conferences and in later life was received by a number of dignitaries, including Eleanor Roosevelt during a trip to the USA. ygb • Mann, J. (ed.) (1941) Re-planning Scotland. Expert evidence on pre-war conditions in Scotland and post-war speeches delivered at planning conference, Largs, 1941 (Prepared on behalf of the Town and Country Planning Association Scotland), (1962) Woman in Parliament. Brown, Y. (2001) ‘Women and society c. 1770s onwards’, in M. Lynch (ed.) Oxford Companion to Scottish History; ODNB (2004); SLL. MANN, Janet (Jessie), born Perth 20 Jan. 1805, died Edinburgh 12 April 1867. Photography pioneer. Daughter of Sarah Laidlaw, and Alexander Mann, housepainter. Jessie Mann grew up with her five siblings in Perth, opposite the house of pioneering Scottish photographer David Octavius Hill. In 1839 she moved with two sisters to Edinburgh, to stay with their brother, a solicitor, then in 1842 to lodgings near Rock House, the location of the photographic studio of Hill and his partner Robert Adamson. She joined them as an assistant, probably pro-

cessing and printing, for at least four years until Adamson’s early death (1848). The painter James Naysmith in a letter to Hill of 1847 refers to ‘the thrice worthy Miss Mann, that most skilful and zealous of assistants’ (Simpson 2008, p. 888). It appears that she did take photographs herself, on occasions when neither man was present, notably a portrait of King Frederick Augustus II of Saxony during his visit to Scotland in 1844; she was accordingly included as a pioneer in an exhibition at the Tate Gallery London in 2016. Portraits of Jessie Mann and her sisters have also been identified in the studio’s records. After Adamson’s death, Jessie Mann worked as a school housekeeper in Musselburgh. SR • The Guardian, 6 May 2016 (article on Tate exhibition); Simpson, R. (2008) ‘Mann, Miss Jessie’ in Hannavy, J. (ed.) Encyclopedia of Nineteenth-Century Photography; (2012) The Photography of Victorian Scotland.

m. Crawford, born Kent 30 Nov. 1908, died Killearn, Stirlingshire, 11 Jan. 2000. Illustrator and textile artist. Daughter of Rosamond Mann, and Archibald Mann, businessman. Precociously talented, Kathleen Mann studied costume design at Croydon School of Art (1924–8). Having developed her interest in peasant dress at the Royal College of Art, she wrote and illustrated Peasant Costume in Europe (1931). In 1930, she was appointed Head of the Embroidery Department at Glasgow School of Art, where she revitalised the department. Introducing a more spontaneous approach, she encouraged work on a large scale. Her growing reputation in the forefront of embroidery design led to recognition by The Studio magazine; her work was featured in a special number, Modern Embroidery (1933). She was obliged to resign on marriage to her colleague Hugh Adam Crawford RSA in 1934; they had two sons and subsequently she wrote and illustrated several books. Her husband’s career took her to Aberdeen where she taught a variety of subjects, but by 1955 she had abandoned textiles in favour of painting. la

MANN, Kathleen,

• Mann, K. (1931) Peasant Costume in Europe, (1937) Appliqué Design and Method, (1937) Embroidery Design and Stitches, (1939) Design from Peasant Art, (1952) China Decoration. Arthur, L. (ed.) (1994) The Unbroken Thread, a Century of Embroidery and Weaving at Glasgow School of Art ; Hogarth, M. (ed.) (1933) Modern Embroidery, Special Spring No., The Studio.

born Windau, Latvia, 24 Nov. 1891, died London March 1989. Active Zionist.

MANN, Selma,

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Selma Mann came from a Latvian Jewish family and attended university in Geneva, then in 1910 at Edinburgh, where she met her doctor husband (formerly known as Teitelman). They had one son. She became involved in charitable work among Glasgow’s Jewish community and is chiefly remembered for two notable contributions. Encouraged by Rebecca Sieff, creator of England’s Federation of Women Zionists, which became the worldwide Women’s International Zionist Organisation (WIZO), Selma Mann was founder-president of the first two WIZO branches in Scotland. She initiated further Scottish branches, and Scotland quickly became a centre for Zionist fundraising by women. In 1935, she formed a Glasgow-based ‘Care of Children Committee’, one of many agencies assisting Jewish child refugees in the UK. As convener, she was instrumental in bringing more than 300 children to Scotland from Nazi-controlled Europe. She later moved to London, and continued to take a prominent role in WIZO while maintaining links with Glasgow members. She remained honorary president of the Glasgow Central Group until her death. lf • Scottish Jewish Archives Centre, Glasgow: Documents relating to Glasgow WIZO. Fleming, L. (2005) ‘Jewish women in Glasgow c.1880–1950: gender, ethnicity and the immigrant experience’, unpublished PhD thesis, Univ. of Glasgow; Jewish Chronicle, 24 March 1989 (obit.); Jewish Echo, 17 March 1989 (obit.); Zionist Yearbook 1960.

n. Ninian, born Mid Yell, Shetland, 10 March 1897, died Westsandwick, Shetland, 19 May 1994. Crofter, knitter, storyteller. Daughter of Janet (Jessie) Manson and John Ninian. Mary Ninian was born into a fishing-crofting family. After marrying Robert Manson (1859–1935), in 1929 she moved to a croft at Westsandwick, where alongside croft work, from spring lambing and peat-raising to autumn potato harvest, she produced hosiery: hand-knitted items that could be exchanged at merchants’ stores for tea, sugar and drapery. Barter-truck lasted in Shetland well after its prohibition under the 1887 Truck Amendment Act. It perpetuated the exploitation of handknitters who never received a fair price for their goods, but also led to the emergence of an active network of women producers with a strong female identity. Mary Manson was taught Fair Isle patterns by an aunt, a valuable skill since Fair Isle hosiery

MANSON, Mary Jane,

commanded high prices. She recalled evenings spent carding and spinning wool with friends, and was proud that one of her shawls was presented to the Princess Royal on her marriage in 1922. Royal patronage – notably the Prince of Wales’s Fair Isle golf sweaters in the 1920s – stimulated demand. Hand-knitting remained a staple home industry in Shetland until the 1960s, when it was largely displaced by machine production. Mary Manson’s fame as a storyteller was demonstrated in oral history interviews shortly before she died. Combining autobiography and folklore, she encapsulated a lost way of life, in a form that empowered the female narrator as a keeper of social memory in the islands. lca • Shetland Archives: 3/3/77/1–3, interview with Mary Manson, 30 Jan. and 17 August 1982, 3/1/397: interview with Netta Inkster, 9 April 2001; British Parliamentary Papers, C555: Commission to Inquire into the Truck System, 2nd report (Shetland), 1872. Abrams, L. (2005) Myth and Materiality in a Woman’s World; Fryer, L. (1995) Knitting by the Fireside and on the Hillside. MAR, Annabella, Countess of

(1536–1603)

see MURRAY, Annabella

MARGARET Logie, Queen of Scotland, n. Drummond, born Perthshire c. 1330, died Marseille, France, c. 1373. Daughter of Malcolm Drummond, minor Lennox and Perthshire lord. Margaret Drummond was the first Scotswoman since the 11th century to marry a reigning King of Scots, David II (1324–71), and the first Scots Queen to face divorce. David had married Joan ‘of the Tower’ (1322–62), daughter of Isabella of France and Edward II of England, in July 1328, under the peace which closed the first phase of the Wars of Independence. Their marriage was never happy: without issue, David took mistresses after his release from English captivity (1346–57). His liaison with the shadowy Katherine Mortimer (d. 1360) – probably daughter of Sir Roger Mortimer of Inverbervie and wife of Sir William Ramsay of Colluthie, whom David imposed as Earl of the disputed region of Fife – caused Joan to return to England and a religious life in 1358. Katherine’s perceived influence upon David’s pro-English policies proved tragic. On about 24 June 1360 she was murdered on the orders of the Earl of Angus and other great lords: she was interred in Newbattle Abbey, Lothian. David now took up with Margaret Drummond, wife of Sir John Logie of Logie

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(d. c. 1363) in Strathearn, by whom she had a son, John, born c. 1350. David exploited the network of lands and offices run by Margaret’s Drummond kinfolk in Stewart-dominated Perthshire. Queen Joan’s death on 7 September 1362 and her burial in the Grey Friars, London, freed David to marry Margaret, ‘who had lived with him for some time’ (Maxwell 1907, pp. 173–4), but only after her first marriage was annulled or John Logie died. Their plans provoked a rebellion led by the Stewart heirs to the throne in spring 1363. David combined the submission of these rebels with marriage to Margaret at the Bishop of St Andrews’ manor of Inchmurdoch near Crail in about May 1363. Queen Margaret was gifted Perthshire lands and customs revenue from Aberdeen and Inverkeithing, a bounty she expanded aggressively to judge from her dispute with Glasgow’s bishop over clerical provision, her bond with Sir John Kennedy of Dunnure c. 1366 (who promised to warn her of any plots against her) and her ambitious procurement for her son of the royal lands of Annandale. She pressed David into stripping the Earl of Ross of his lands and briefly arresting the heir presumptive, Robert Steward. But by mid-1368, David had moved to annul this issueless marriage (one 15thcentury chronicler even accused Queen Margaret of pretending to be with child) and marry instead Agnes Dunbar, sister of the Earl of March and niece of *Agnes Randolph (‘Black Agnes’). Queen Margaret’s appeal to the papacy prevented this match and threatened interdict upon Scotland. Her claim to recover a fortune in lands, gold coin and jewels continued after David’s unexpected death on 22 February 1371: the new king, Robert II, was spared only when Queen Margaret died at Marseille on her way to the Pope at Avignon. The papacy paid for her burial. Her son, John Logie, was stripped of his lands thereafter. mp • NRS: Vatican Transcripts, RH2/6. Maxwell, H. (trans.) (1907) Sir Thomas Gray’s The Scalacronica; ODNB (2004) (Margaret [n. Drummond]); Penman, M. (2004) David II, 1329–71; Scotichron.; SP. MARGARET, ‘Maid of Norway’, Queen-designate of Scots, born Norway (possibly Bergen) c. 1282,

died Orkney, October 1290. Daughter of Margaret, daughter of Alexander III, and Erik II, King of Norway. Alexander III’s death on 18 March 1286 left his grand-daughter Margaret as his sole direct heir. Her right to inherit the Scottish crown had been established in parliament in 1284, but divisions within

the governing community threatened to cause civil war; this was narrowly averted by the committee of Guardians elected in April 1286. Perhaps even earlier, negotiations had begun for Margaret’s marriage to Edward, son of Edward I of England. The Treaties of Salisbury (6 November 1289) and Birgham (18 July 1290) ensured mutual support for Margaret’s inheritance and effected the marriage contract, hedged about by elaborate safeguards for Scottish independence. The treaties were rendered ineffectual, however, by Margaret’s death in Orkney during her passage to Scotland. The resulting dynastic crisis led to decades of Anglo-Scottish warfare. nhr • ODNB (2004); Reid, N. H. (1982) ‘Margaret “Maid of Norway” and Scottish Queenship’, in Reading Medieval Studies, 8 (Bibl.).

born Denmark c. 1457, died Stirling 14 July 1486. Daughter of Dorothea of Brandenburg, and Christian I of Denmark . The marriage of Margaret of Denmark and James III (1452–88) on 13 July 1469 brought the Orkney and Shetland islands to the Scottish crown. Christian I had pledged the Northern Isles to Scotland because of his financial difficulties over paying his only daughter’s dowry, and the Scottish parliament annexed the isles in 1472. Margaret was awarded a generous dower (provision for widowhood) by the Scots, including one third of the royal revenues, the castle of Stirling and the palace of Linlithgow. Unlike her two predecessors, *Joan Beaufort and *Mary of Guelders, as Scottish Queen, Margaret does not appear to have enjoyed a close working partnership with her husband. Only one grant issued in the King’s name was made with her consent, suggesting that the two did not often discuss royal business. This single grant is not representative of an otherwise unrecorded daily administrative partnership but was issued in extraordinary circumstances, rewarding John Dundas for his part in liberating James III from Edinburgh Castle in 1482. The King’s capture at Lauder Bridge and his imprisonment in Edinburgh marked the highpoint of Margaret’s political involvement. She had been appointed guardian of James, heir to the throne, and custodian of Edinburgh Castle for five years from 1478, making her influential in the negotiation of a resolution to the 1482 crisis. Her custody of the heir ensured that the King’s brother, Albany, MARGARET of Denmark, Queen of Scotland,

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had to seek her advice about how to proceed, and she had access to James III through Lord Darnley, whom she paid as keeper of Edinburgh. The ­relatively prompt and bloodless end to the crisis is testament to her political acumen and her insistence that government continue in the King’s name. Margaret’s role during 1482 may not have been welcomed by her husband. James III resided largely in Edinburgh after his release, while Margaret remained in her dower castle of Stirling with her three sons. She retained their custody, probably for security reasons, and control of their education until her death in 1486. James III sought to have her canonised in 1487, but this public relations campaign was undermined by a rumour (circulated in Denmark by the rebels supporting the future James IV in 1488) that one of the King’s men had poisoned the Queen. fd • Chandler, S. B. (1953) ‘An Italian life of Margaret, Queen of James III,’ Scot. Hist. Rev. 32; Downie, F. (2008) ‘Queenship in late medieval Scotland’ in M. Brown and R. Tanner (eds), Scottish Kingship, 1306–1542: essays in honour of Norman Macdougall; Macdougall, N. (1982) James III, (1997) James IV; ODNB (2004) (Bibl.); Riis, T. (1988) Should Auld Acquaintance Be Forgot . . . Scottish–Danish Relations c. 1450–1707. MARGARET of Scotland, Countess of Kent, m. de Burgh, born before 1195, buried London 1259; ISABELLA of Scotland, Countess of Norfolk, m. Bigod, born before 1195, died 1270, buried London 1270; MARGARET of Scotland, the younger (Marjory), Countess of Pembroke, m. Marshal,

born before 1214, died London 17 Nov. 1244. Daughters of *Ermengarde de Beaumont, and William the Lion. The marriages of William the Lion’s daughters demonstrate the unequal nature of 13th-century Anglo-Scottish relations. All three were promised royal marriages but had to settle for less prestigious matches. Margaret of Scotland was the eldest daughter; her mother was either a daughter of Adam de Whitsome, possibly William’s first wife, or Ermengarde de Beaumont, mother of her two sisters, Isabella and Margaret the younger. Declared heir to the throne in 1195 during marriage negotiations with Saxony, she was replaced by her brother Alexander, born 1198. In 1209, the Anglo-Scottish Treaty of Norham arranged for Margaret to marry Prince Henry of England and Isabella to marry his brother Richard. The sisters went to England but neither marriage occurred. In October 1221, Margaret married Hubert de Burgh (c. 1170–1243),

Justiciar of England, a disparaging match as he was not ennobled as Earl of Kent until 1227. He fell from favour in 1232; Margaret took sanctuary until 1234 at Bury, but took independent action by arranging, probably without her husband’s knowledge, the marriage of their daughter Megotta (Margaret) to the Earl of Gloucester. When Henry III discovered the marriage in 1236, it was dissolved. Megotta died in 1237, but the secret marriage had alienated the King, and the de Burghs’ role in public life had ended by 1239. Widowed in 1243, Margaret lived out her remaining years as an English noblewoman. In May 1225, Isabella married Roger Bigod (c. 1212–70), son and heir of the Earl of Norfolk. In 1245, he repudiated her on grounds of consanguinity, but the church declared the marriage valid in 1253, forcing him to reunite with her. Alexander II attempted to negotiate a marriage for his sister Margaret the younger with Richard in 1227 and Henry III in 1231, but the English magnates rejected the matches. In August 1235, she married Gilbert Marshal, Earl of Pembroke, and was widowed in 1241. caa • Duncan, A. A. M. (1975) Scotland: the making of the kingdom; Giles, J. A. (ed.) (1853) Matthew Paris’s English History; Giles, J. A. (ed.) (1849) Roger of Wendover’s Flowers of History; ODNB (2004) (Margaret of Scotland, Countess of Kent); Scotichron.; SP; Weikert, K. (2016) ‘The Princesses who might have been hostages: the custody and marriages of Margaret and Isabella of Scotland, 1209–1220s’ in M. Bennett and K. Weikert (eds) Medieval Hostageship c. 700–c. 1500. MARGARET Rose, Princess see SNOWDON, The Princess Margaret Rose, Countess of (1930–2002)

probably born Castle Reka, Hungary, c. 1046, died Edinburgh 16 Nov. 1093. Daughter of Agatha of West Friesland, and Edward ‘the Exile’ of England. Margaret’s father, Edward ‘the Exile’, son of the English king, Edmund ‘Ironside’, fled into exile in Hungary after the Danish conquest of England in 1016 and married Agatha, daughter of Liudolf, Margrave of West Friesland. They returned to England in 1056, during the reign of Edward the Confessor, with their children, Edgar ‘the Aetheling’, Margaret and Christina, expecting that Edward ‘the Exile’ would succeed the childless Confessor. However, Edward himself died shortly after his return, and his family was caught up in the Norman conquest of 1066. Duke William’s victory at Hastings put Agatha and her children

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in peril, since Edgar was an obvious rallying point for disaffected Anglo-Saxons. In 1068, the family fled into exile again and sailed north; they are ­traditionally believed to have landed at the bay of St Margaret’s Hope on the north side of the Firth of Forth. Malcolm III (r. 1058–93) became protector of these symbols of resistance to the new Norman political regime by taking Margaret for his second wife, in 1070/1. What happened to his first wife, *Ingibjorg, is unclear. Malcolm and Margaret had at least six sons and two daughters. Margaret’s biography (written by her confessor, Turgot, after her death) (Metcalfe 1895), gives evidence of the couple’s close personal relationship. Turgot records stories about Malcolm’s tolerance of Margaret’s ‘pious plundering’ of his wealth to give to the poor and how Malcolm upbraided her in jocular fashion. Such contemporary written evidence is rare; though the biography is a product of ecclesiastical learning and Latin culture, it nonetheless provides precious glimpses of daily events at court and of Margaret’s relationship with her children. It was written as a ‘model of queenship’, commissioned by her daughter *Matilda (Edith), wife of Henry I and Queen of England. Margaret’s reputation as a spiritual woman, full of religious zeal, who devoted her life to good works, grew after her death in November 1093, following news of the death of her husband and their eldest son Edward three days earlier, in an ambush at Alnwick. Margaret was eventually canonised, and on 19 June 1250 her remains were translated from a tomb in Dunfermline Abbey to a shrine in the Lady Chapel there (marked today by a plaque). Having the founding mother of the MacMalcolm dynasty recognised as a saint brought the crown enormous prestige. Her shift, ‘Sanct Margaretis serk’, was used to help later Scottish queens in childbirth. Her Gospel Book survives in the Bodleian Library, and a bone is held in the Ursuline convent of St Margaret in Edinburgh. Yet Turgot’s biography has been detrimental to Margaret’s reputation, partly because it stresses her piety and the extent of her religious commitments. Some readers have reacted against the importance accorded to her as a ‘moderniser’ of the Scottish church, which Turgot says she tried to reform. However, the evidence he provides of her standing up to the churchmen whom she summoned to councils for the purpose of combating the ‘defenders of a perverse custom’ (ibid., p. 55), with Malcolm as interpreter, indicates a spirited

and educated woman. Concerned with the external dignity of the court, she reformed the personnel and ‘increased the splendour of the royal palace’ (ibid., p. 53). Up-to-date dress and lavish adornment were introduced and she set up a workshop in her own quarters, where needlewomen produced liturgical vestments and undoubtedly fine garments. She also encouraged the import of merchandise. Turgot says that Margaret did all this only because ‘she was compelled to do what the royal dignity required of her’ (ibid., p. 53). More importantly, she set a pious example for her family. She established a free ferry across the Firth of Forth for pilgrims to St Andrews. She strongly influenced the Scottish religious and cultural scene, patronising ancient ecclesiastical centres and introducing reformed ideas of cult and worship, especially at the dynastic centre of Dunfermline, where she founded Holy Trinity with Benedictine monks from Christ Church, Canterbury. Turgot’s account is certainly fulsome in its praise (and perhaps a little boring in its adulation) and some have reacted against the hagiographical appreciations of earlier biographies. However, lack of sympathy for a woman in a foreign land who strove to meet the highest religious ideals and introduce the latest ecclesiastical innovations should not mar appreciation of the outstanding personal achievements of this 11th-century queen. As the last representative of the Anglo-Saxon royal house, she perpetuated the bloodline and preserved its cultural identity by giving royal Anglo-Saxon names to five children; three of her sons became kings of Scots and one of her daughters became queen of England. bec • Bartlett, R. (ed. and trans.) (2003) The Miracles of Saint Æbbe of Coldingham and Saint Margaret of Scotland; Crawford, B. E. (with Clancy, T. O.) (2001) ‘The formation of the Scottish Kingdom’, in R. A. Houston and W. W. J. Knox (eds) The New Penguin History of Scotland (Bibl.); Huneycutt, L. L. (2003) Matilda of Scotland: a study in medieval queenship; Keene, C. (2013) Saint Margaret, Queen of the Scots: a life in perspective; Metcalfe, W. M. (trans.) (1895, 1990) Lives of the Scottish Saints. ODNB (2004); Wall, V. (1997) ‘Queen Margaret of Scotland, 1070–93: burying the past, enshrining the future’ in A. Duggan (ed.) Queens and Queenship in Medieval Europe, pp. 27–38; Wilson, A. J. (1993) St Margaret Queen of Scotland (Bibl.). MARGARET Tudor, Queen of Scotland, born Westminster Palace, London, 28/29 Nov. 1489, died Methven Castle, Perthshire, 18 Oct. 1541. Daughter of Elizabeth of York, and Henry VII of England.

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Margaret Tudor was brought up at Richmond Palace with her two brothers, Arthur and the future Henry VIII. On 24 January 1502, aged 12, she was betrothed to marry James IV, King of Scots (1473–1513), and after a proxy wedding a year later she travelled north. Her wedding took place at Holyrood Abbey on 8 August 1503. William Dunbar marked the occasion with his poem, ‘The Thistle and the Rose’. James was twice his bride’s age but treated her kindly and as long as her father was alive there was peace between Scotland and England. When her brother Henry VIII succeeded to the English throne in 1509, the situation changed; he attacked France and the French asked James IV for help. Ignoring Margaret’s pleas, James invaded England, only to be killed at Flodden on 9 September 1513, leaving her to rule as regent for the young James V, born in 1512. A second son was born in April 1514. She forfeited this position when, less than a year later, she married Archibald Douglas, 6th Earl of Angus (c. 1489–1557). John Stewart, Duke of Albany and heir presumptive, replaced her, ruling the country in the French interest. He not only turned against the Douglases, but demanded possession of the young king and his brother in 1515; Margaret handed them over then fled to England, giving birth to Angus’s daughter at Harbottle Castle on her way south. She took the baby, *Lady Margaret Douglas, to London, spending the winter at Henry VIII’s court. In spring 1517, Henry sent Margaret north again. Albany was about to visit France, and this was the opportunity for her to resume power, ruling in the English interest with the help of her husband. She fell out with him, however, and to her brother’s fury decided to divorce him. When Albany returned in 1521 he exiled Angus to France and he and Margaret governed Scotland together. Their joint rule could have remedied Scotland’s internal problems, but Margaret was financially dependent on Henry VIII, who successfully put pressure on her to inform him of Albany’s military plans. Frustrated by the Scots’ refusal to follow him across the border to besiege Wark Castle, Albany left Scotland in May 1524. Margaret was in power once more, and redoubled her efforts to divorce Angus, having fallen in love with Harry Stewart (c. 1495–1553/4), later Lord Methven. Henry VIII made vigorous efforts to prevent the Pope from granting the divorce, Angus arrived back in Scotland, and by 1526 Margaret’s government had collapsed. When her divorce was finally granted in 1527, Margaret married Harry

Stewart. By 1528 James V was old enough to rule for himself. He found his mother as trying as everyone else did, and when he discovered nearly ten years later that she was attempting to divorce Lord Methven in order to remarry Angus, he put a stop to her plans. In the late 1530s she largely retired from public life, dying at Methven Castle in 1541 after suffering a stroke. She was buried in the Carthusian monastery in Perth. Often criticised for her impulsive behaviour and her matrimonial adventures, Queen Margaret nonetheless deserves greater recognition for her determination, her pragmatic outlook and her remarkable talent for self-preservation. rkm • Buchanan, P. H. (1985) Margaret Tudor, Queen of Scots; Fradenburg, L. O. (1991) City, Marriage, Tournament: arts of rule in late medieval Scotland, (1998) ‘Troubled times: Margaret Tudor and the historians’, in S. Mapstone and J. Wood (eds) The Rose and the Thistle ; Marshall, R. K. (2003) Scottish Queens 1034–1714; ODNB (2004).

died Rheims after 1615, daughter of Marie Pieris, and George, 4th Lord Seton; Mary BEATON, born c. 1543, died 1597, daughter of Jeanne de la Reinville, and Robert Beaton of Creich; Mary LIVINGSTON, died 1585, daughter of Lady Agnes Douglas, and Alexander, 5th Lord Livingston; Mary FLEMING, born 1542, died c. 1600, daughter of Janet Stewart, and Malcolm, 3rd Lord Fleming. Chosen as maids of honour to *Mary, Queen of Scots when she went to France as the fiancée of the future François II in 1548, the four Maries were at first relegated by Henri II to a convent at Poissy. Soon reunited with their mistress, they remained with her, accompanying her back to Scotland in 1561. Elegant and sophisticated, at the centre of the Scottish court, they were close friends and confidantes of the Queen, who arranged their marriages. In 1565, Mary Livingston married John, son of Robert, 3rd Lord Sempill (d. 1583); Mary Beaton married Alexander Ogilvy of Boyne (later husband of *Jane Gordon, countess of Sutherland) in 1566, and in 1567 Mary Fleming and William Maitland of Lethington (1525/30–1573), brother of *Marie Maitland and the Queen’s Secretary of State, were married. Some time after his death in 1573, Mary Fleming married George Meldrum of Fyvie. Mary Seton remained unmarried and was with the Queen when she surrendered at Carberry in 1567. She and Mary Livingston attended Queen Mary at Lochleven Castle, and after her escape to England

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in 1568, Mary Seton joined her, sharing her ­captivity for the next 15 years. Christopher Norton wished to marry Mary Seton, but was executed after his involvement in the Northern Rising against Elizabeth I. When Andrew Beaton, master of the royal household, fell in love with her, she rejected him on the grounds that she had taken a vow of chastity. Eventually, her health failed and she retired in 1583 to the Abbey of St Pierre aux Dames in Rheims, where Queen Mary’s aunt, Renée de Lorraine, was abbess. She died there. A popular ballad about the Four Maries replaced the real Mary Fleming and Mary Livingston with the imaginary Mary Carmichael and Mary Hamilton (allegedly executed for conceiving an illegitimate child). In fact, none of the Maries suffered this fate but the idea of the four small girls who were faithful attendants of Mary, Queen of Scots has always caught the public imagination and secured them their place in history. rkm • Duncan, T. (1905) ‘The Queen’s Maries’, Scot. Hist. Rev., 2; Marshall, R. K. (2006) Queen Mary’s Women; *ODNB (2004) (see Queen’s Maries); Seton, G. (1896) A History of the Family of Seton, 2 vols; SP; Strickland, S. A. (1873) Life of Mary, Queen of Scots.

born Scotland fl. 1765–89. Author and playwright. Jean Marishall published her first novel, The History of Miss Clarinda Cathcart and Miss Fanny Renton (1765, repr. 1975) under the name ‘Jean Marshall’. Then living in London, she used her social connections to persuade the Duchess of Northumberland to present the novel to its dedicatee, the Queen, but she was disappointed that the book brought her only fifteen guineas. The History of Alicia Montague (1767, repr. 1975), attained more success. Although these novels were conventional romantic works, her heroines were enterprising and resourceful. Of the former, Pam Perkins observes, ‘when Clarinda is, apparently inevitably, abducted by a scheming aristocrat, it is a thorough familiarity with romances that enables her confidante Nancy to solve the mystery of her disappearance, while everybody else is left helpless and bewildered’ (Perkins 2001, p. 10). In the latter she suggests that women would be less likely to be seduced if they could establish themselves in independent trades. Her work, although obscure, is of interest in that she asserted the necessity for women’s financial independence, downplayed domesticity, criticised male oppression of women, and envisioned utopian social reform.

MARISHALL, Jean [Jean Marshall],

She found less success as a playwright. She met the famous theatrical impresario Samuel Foote, hoping to have her comedy Sir Harry Gaylove (1772) produced, but her Scottish accent seems to have put him off. Her attempt at establishing a periodical publication also failed. According to a brief memoir, she was a private teacher in Edinburgh for several years before publishing her next work, A Series of Letters (1789), in which the memoir is included. In it she attacks the legitimacy of the court, critiques genteel marriage and male arrogance, asserts middle-class values and proposes a humanitarian criminal law and planned economy. Like *Elizabeth Hamilton, she published her ideas on education as letters supposedly addressed to a former pupil, and states that she has been influenced by the Scottish system of education. Perkins suggests that Marishall is innovative ‘in suggesting that the education of men ought to be more like that of women’ (ibid.). A reviewer in The Scots Magazine praised her judicious comments but deprecated her critique of domesticity. akc • Marishall, J., Works as above. Carr, R. (2014) Gender and Enlightenment Culture in Eighteenth-Century Scotland; ODNB (2004); Perkins, P. (2001) ‘Planting seeds of virtue: sentimental fiction and the moral education of women’, Cardiff Corvey: Reading the Romantic Text, 6, 2 at www.romtext.org.uk/articles/cc06_ n02, (2010) Women Writers and the Edinburgh Enlightenment; (1789) ‘Review of A Series of Letters’, Scots Magazine, 51, pp. 93–4. MARLEY, Hilda Gertrude (Sister Marie Hilda in religion), born Bishop Auckland 13 Oct. 1876, died Glasgow 19 Nov. 1951. Educator, psychologist. Daughter of Marie Simonds, and George Marley, miller. Youngest of seven children, Hilda Marley was educated at convent schools in South Africa and England. She entered the teaching order of Notre Dame de Namur in Belgium in 1898, becoming a Sister in 1901. From 1904 to 1930, she lectured at Notre Dame Training College, Dowanhill, Glasgow, specialising in psychology and mental testing in the 1920s. In 1931, with Robert Rusk of Jordanhill College, she founded Notre Dame Child Guidance Clinic in Glasgow. The clinic’s motto was Dirupisti vincula mea (‘You have freed me from my chains’). Funded by local sources and the EIS, she implemented and developed ideas from Montessori, Bowlby, Dewey, Klein, Pestalozzi and Winnicott, using visual aids, play-therapy, individualised learning and psycho-drama. The clinic’s

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services to children were free and non-denominational. A woman of purposeful vision, spiritual strength and good humour, despite deafness, Sister Marie Hilda was aware, ahead of her times, of the interplay between emotional deprivation, poverty and ill-health. She drew on the work of the Tavistock Clinic in London, and was in demand as a lecturer in Britain and abroad. Appointed to the Scottish Advisory Council on the Treatment and Rehabilitation of Offenders in 1944, she published a textbook on her therapeutic work. Two Glasgow clinics, one for primary-school-age children (Athole Gardens) and one for teenagers (Fern Tower) were her legacy, though the Clinic has recently had to sell the former building. JF • Marley, Sister Marie Hilda, SND (1944) Child Guidance. Fitzpatrick, T. A. (1994) No Mean Service ; ODNB (2004); Sister Jude, SND (1981) Freedom to Grow: Sister Marie Hilda’s vision of child guidance.

[H. E. Marshall], born Bo’ness 9 August 1867, died Hampstead, London 19 Sept. 1941. Author of popular history books, including Our Island Story. Daughter of Catherine Jane Pratt, and John Marshall, Northern Ware manufacturer. Henrietta Marshall, known as ‘Leeby’ to friends and relatives (Skelton), was born into a wealthy family with eight children, and well educated: in the 1880s, she was a pupil at Laurel Bank Boarding School, Melrose. She was briefly (1901–4) warden of Queen Margaret Hall in Glasgow. In 1905–8, she was living in Oxford, and possibly spent some time later in Australia as a governess. She is known to have spent 1913–17 in Redlands, California, writing a book on US history (1919): the A. K. Smiley Library there holds autographed copies of her works. Her engagingly written narrative histories, aimed mostly at a young audience, were hugely popular. Some thirty-four are listed in the British Library catalogue, and print runs went into thousands. Her books were all authored as ‘H. E. Marshall’, their author deliberately concealing her full name, which did however become known to library cataloguers. Records of royalties paid by her publishers to ‘Miss Marshall’ in 1912 are in the Jack/Nelson archives. In her later years, however, she was not well-off. H. E. Marshall’s best-known book was a history of Britain, Our Island Story (1905/2005). Her Scottish background emerges in the preface to another work, Scotland’s Story: a child’s history of Scotland (1906), written as if to a little girl: ‘you

MARSHALL, Henrietta Elizabeth,

know we were defeated sometimes, Caledonia’ (1906, p. vii, our emphasis). She ended it with an optimistic view of the 1707 Union, suggesting that Scotland’s history thereafter was shared with ‘the glory of the Empire’. Our Island Story in particular shaped the view of history of many generations of British children, and the book was reissued in 2005 by Civitas, following a press campaign about history in schools (McKie, 2004; Clare 2005; www. civitas.org.uk). SR • BL catalogue; NRS, birth records; Census of Scotland 1881, 1891; University of Edinburgh, Special Collections, Nelson archive, no. 619 [T. E. Jack Royalties]. Marshall, H. E., Works as above and (1907) Stories of Roland Told to the Children; (1908) Our Empire Story; (1908) Stories of Beowulf Told to the Children; (1909) The Child’s English Literature; (1919) This Country of Ours, The Story of the United States; (1937) Kings and Things. McKie, D. ‘History after lights out’, The Guardian, 9 Dec 2004; Clare, J. ‘Wonderful response to history appeal’, Daily Telegraph, 22 June 2005; ODNB (2004). Extra research findings: Moyra Ashford, USA, and Robert Whelan, Civitas. Personal knowledge: Dr Martin Skelton. MARSHALL, Jean

see MARISHALL, Jean (fl. 1766–89)

OBE, FRS, FRSE, born Rothesay 20 April 1896, died Millport 7 April 1977. Marine biologist. Daughter of Jean Colville Binnie, and John Marshall, MD. Graduating from the University of Glasgow in 1919, Sheina Marshall held a Carnegie Fellowship there (1920–2), and joined the SMBA’s Millport station on the Clyde as a naturalist in 1924. With her long-time collaborator, Andrew P. Orr, she ‘established Millport as a major centre’ (Yonge 1977, p. 66) for plankton and other research. They co-authored 12 papers on the lifecycle of the copepod Calanus finmarchicus, of vital economic significance to western Scotland as part of the food chain for the herring, since it converted phytoplankton into protein and fat suitable as food for shoaling fishes and other creatures. In 1927, she joined the Great Barrier Reef expedition of (later Sir) Maurice Yonge, studying coral formations. During the Second World War, she investigated the production of agar (used in the preparation of vaccines) from native seaweeds, after Japanese sources became unavailable. In 1955, she and Orr published their major study of Calanus finmarchicus. One of the first five women admitted to the RSE (1949), she was elected to the RSL in MARSHALL, Sheina MacAlister,

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1963. After her formal retirement in 1964, Sheina Marshall remained active in research at Millport, presiding over the staff tea table, for which she embroidered a teapot cover with copepods. She travelled latterly with her sister Margaret Marshall, OBE, Hon LLD (d. Jan. 1995), formerly Matron of Edinburgh Royal Infirmary and, during the war, Principal Matron for Emergency Medical Services in Scotland. Their younger sister, Dorothy Nairn Marshall, MBE (1900–92), was a prominent amateur archaeologist and museum curator on Bute. In addition to her pioneering work on food chains, Sheina Marshall is remembered as hospitable, dignified and generous – she bequeathed her house for the use of the Directors of Millport. mamc • Marine Biological Station, Millport archive: Sheina Marshall’s notebooks, papers and offprints. Marshall, S. M. and Orr, A. P. (1955) The Biology of a Marine Copepod: Calanus finmarchicus; Marshall, S. M. (1987) An Account of the Marine Station at Millport. McLaughlin, P. A. and Gilchrist, S. (1993) ‘Women’s contributions to carcinology’, in F. Truesdale (ed.) History of Carcinology, pp. 165–206; ODNB (2004); Russell, Sir F. (1978) ‘Sheina MacAlister Marshall 1896–1977’, Biographical Memoirs of FRS, vol. 24, pp. 369–89; Yonge, Sir M. (1977) ‘Sheina MacAlister Marshall – Millport 1922–77’, Scot. Marine Biol. Ass. Ann. Rept, 31 Mar. 1977, pp. 66–9 (Bibl. to 1977). Private information: Prof J. A. Allen, Millport, and Mr I. Gibbs, Bute Museum.

n. Mackay, born Isle of Skye, March 1847, died Adelaide, South Australia, 15 March 1937. Writer. Daughter of Janet Mackinnon and Samuel Nicholson Mackay, ­crofters. Catherine Martin used several pseudonyms, including ‘M. C.’, ‘C. M.’, ‘Ishbel’, ‘Helen Derwent’, ‘Mrs Alick MacLeod’, ‘Mrs Frederick Martin’, ‘Mrs C. E. M. Martin’. The Mackay family emigrated to South Australia from their poor croft in 1855. Catherine Mackay grew up in the south east of South Australia at the end of the frontier era. She supplemented her private education with intensive study of the literature of German Romanticism. While running a school in Mount Gambier with her sisters, she began publishing verse, serial and short stories in the local press from 1865. In Adelaide, from 1877, she worked as a clerk and then as a writer, but also travelled in Europe for long periods. In 1882, she married Frederick Martin: they had no children.

MARTIN, Catherine Edith MacAuley,

Her major works, some published anonymously or pseudonymously, were marked by a great intellectual independence. The Explorers and Other Poems (1874) memorialised the ill-fated Burke and Wills expedition and explored her ‘epic struggles of faith’ (Ackland 1994, p. 95). Her best-known book, An Australian Girl (1890), has been described as ‘one of Australia’s most important, distinctive and ambitious nineteenth-century novels’ (Giles 1998, p. 98). It describes the struggles of Stella Courtland, an Australian ‘New Woman’, in a context both of national identity and social change. The Incredible Journey (1923) has been seen as challenging negative stereotypes of Aboriginal women as mothers. ma • M. C. (1874) The Explorers and other poems; Anon. (1890) An Australian Girl, (2002) An Australian Girl, R. Campbell, ed. (contains biographical essay by Allen, M.); McLeod, Mrs A. (1892) The Silent Sea, 3 vols; Martin, C. E. M. (1923) The Incredible Journey. Ackland, M. (1994) That Shining Band; ADB; Giles, F. (1998) Too Far Everywhere. MARY of Guelders, Queen of Scotland, born Guelders c. 1433, died 1 December 1463. Eldest daughter of Catherine of Cleves, and Arnold, Duke of Guelders. The marriage potential of Mary of Guelders was of particular interest to her uncle, the Duke of Burgundy, who lacked legitimate daughters to offer in marriage. In 1446, five years after the failed attempt of the French king to arrange her marriage, Mary became a resident of the Burgundian court. Her residency in the household of Isabel of Portugal, the politically astute duchess of Burgundy, provided her with a form of political apprenticeship. Mary was put forward as a possible bride for Albert, Duke of Austria, before Burgundy negotiated her marriage to James II (1430–60). The marriage, with its accompanying alliances with Burgundy, Guelders and Brittany, was a political coup, broadening Scotland’s diplomatic options and raising its European profile without endangering the long-standing French alliance. Mary’s marriage and coronation were ­celebrated at Holyrood on 3 July 1449. She and James had five sons and three daughters, including a son and daughter who died in infancy. The Queen was promised an annual income of £5,000, generated largely by her extensive dower lands, and undertook an extensive building programme. She founded a hospital and church at Fail, Ayrshire, in the late 1450s, ordered the construction of a defensive castle

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at Ravenscraig in 1460, and was responsible for works at Falkland and repairs at Stirling during the minority of her son, James III. Her greatest project was the foundation in 1460 of Holy Trinity collegiate church and hospital in Edinburgh. The Queen’s political skill was demonstrated during the years immediately after James II’s death in 1460. Mary and the regency council continued his flexible policy with regard to the LancastrianYorkist conflict in England, and relied upon men who had been appointed by, or had served, James II. In her own right, Mary undertook negotiations with both Lancastrian and Yorkist leaders, received letters and embassies from European rulers, and was described as the leader of the dominant party in government. Bishop Kennedy, who succeeded her as leader of government, opposed her power in parliament, but Mary was able to withstand the criticism that a woman could not, and should not, govern. Her early death in 1463 meant that this key period in the development of the Scottish queen’s role was relatively brief. fd • Downie, F. A. (2006) She is but a Woman: queenship in Scotland, 1424–1463; Dunlop, A. I. (1950) The Life and Times of James Kennedy, Bishop of St Andrews; Macdougall, N. (1982) James III; McGladdery, C. (1990) James II; ODNB (2004) (Mary of Gueldres).

born Bar-leDuc, Lorraine, 20 Nov. 1515, died Edinburgh 11 June 1560. Queen Dowager, Regent of Scotland. Daughter of Antoinette de Bourbon, and Claude, Duc de Guise. Mary of Guise was the eldest child of the newly created house of Guise, a scion of the princely house of Lorraine and, arguably, the most powerful dynasty of 16th-century France. Her early life was spent as a Poor Clare at the Convent at Pont-auMousson under the tutelage of her grandmother, Philippa de Gueldres, but at the age of 14 she was removed by her uncle, who thought her better suited to a life at court. She became a favourite of François I who helped arrange her marriage in 1534 to Louis, Duc de Longueville (1510–37), Grand Chamberlain of France. They had two children, François and Louis. During her second pregnancy, however, her husband died, the first of many deaths that marred Mary’s personal happiness. Her infant also died. A second marriage was quickly negotiated with James V (1512–42), François I’s recently widowed son-in-law. James had married Madeleine of France (1520–37) in January 1537, but the ailing princess had died in July after only six MARY of Guise, Queen of Scotland,

weeks in Scotland. James and Mary of Guise were married by proxy on 9 May 1538. Scotland’s new Queen arrived at St Andrews the following June. She bore three children in quick succession: James (1540), Robert (1541) and *Mary (1542). A week after Robert’s birth, however, the couple suffered a double blow – both princes died within hours of each other. When James V died suddenly on 14 December 1542, Scotland’s new queen was barely one week old. Mary Queen of Scots’ sovereignty, Guisean lineage and Catholic claim to the English throne made her a figure of extraordinary dynastic importance. She alone could unite the kingdoms of Scotland, England and Ireland under one Catholic crown. Marriage dominated her reign as it brought with it notions of British imperialism and possible control of the entire British Isles. Mary of Guise, now Queen Dowager of Scotland, was naturally keen to protect and advance her daughter’s dynastic interests. This was the pretext for her entry into Scottish politics during the 1540s, in opposition to the proposed dynastic union of the English and Scottish crowns contracted in the treaties of Greenwich (1543). During the English invasions known as the ‘rough wooings’, Mary of Guise staunchly upheld French interests and secured French financial and military assistance against the English. The treaty of Haddington (1548) arranged Mary’s betrothal to the Dauphin François, with whom she was sent to live as an absentee monarch for safety. Surprisingly, her mother remained in Scotland until the Anglo-Scottish conflict was over, returning to France in 1550. The Scots who accompanied her, however, wanted the Queen Dowager to replace James, 2nd Earl of Arran and Duc de Châtelherault, as regent once Mary’s minority ended. She reluctantly agreed and returned to Scotland in 1551 – days after her eldest son, François, died in her arms at Dieppe. Mary of Guise became Queen Regent in April 1554. An effective, astute and well respected politician, she aimed to strengthen royal power and impose law and order. In 1558, she saw the completion of her dynastic policies with the marriage of Mary and François and, more impressively, gained parliament’s consent to grant the crown matrimonial to the dauphin. The year 1559, however, witnessed the outbreak of the Reformation rebellion. Until that time, religion had been a secondary consideration for Mary of Guise, who adopted a tolerant and accommodating position towards the reform movement. The dubious legality of 306

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Elizabeth I’s 1558 accession in Catholic eyes, and Henri II’s subsequent campaign to advance the Catholic claim of Mary Queen of Scots to the English crown, however, forced her to take a harder line towards Protestantism. Her r­ eligious ­proclamation ordering all Scots to return to Catholicism (March 1559) sparked a chain of events that eventually led to the end of France’s influence in Scotland. Consistently believing that the true aim of the rebellion was not religion but the subversion of authority, Mary of Guise had her suspicions confirmed by the Lords of the Congregation’s ‘Act of Suspension’ (October 1559) deposing her as regent, and England’s military intervention in 1560. France’s failure to come to her aid saw her administration begin to crumble. Only with her death would its collapse be complete. Mary of Guise died at Edinburgh Castle on 11 June 1560. Fearing demonstrations of support for her cause if she was buried at Holyrood, the Protestant lords left her body for many months in St Margaret’s Chapel. She was finally buried in 1561 at the Convent of St Peter, Rheims. per • Cameron, J. (1998) James V; ODNB (2004); Ritchie, P. E. (2002) Mary of Guise in Scotland, 1548–1560: a political career (Bibl.). MARY, Queen of Scots, born Linlithgow 8 December 1542, died Fotheringhay, England, 7 February 1587. Daughter of *Mary of Guise, and James V. Mary’s father died on 14 December 1542, embroiled in war with England. As the new Queen, Mary’s betrothal to the future Edward VI was first agreed but then renounced; Anglo-Scottish war, the ‘rough wooing’, resumed. Following their disastrous defeat at Pinkie in 1547, the Scots sought French military aid, agreeing to Mary’s delivery to France in 1548 and betrothal to the Dauphin, François (1544–60). Mary embraced French court life, where her beauty, charm, wit and grace were warmly appreciated. She married François on 24 April 1558. As a great-grand-daughter of Henry VII, Mary’s Tudor blood became crucial when the Catholic Mary of England was succeeded by the Protestant Elizabeth in November 1558. Henri II of France had Mary adopt the English royal arms, which Elizabeth never forgave. When Henri II died in 1559, Mary became Queen of France, as wife of François II. Meanwhile, in Scotland, where Mary of Guise was regent, the throne was rocked by a successful Protestant, anti-French uprising (1559–60), sup-

ported by England. Nevertheless, Mary, widowed in late 1560, returned from France to Scotland on 19 August 1561, having agreed with the Protestant leaders including Lord James Stewart, her illegitimate half-brother (whom she created Earl of Moray), that she would accept the Protestant regime while retaining a private Catholic Mass. Mary’s lavish court and progresses were popular, but her regime’s stability rested on détente with England. She negotiated with Elizabeth for the English succession. When Mary offered to make a suitable marriage, Elizabeth in 1564 offered her own favourite, Leicester – but without a firm promise of the succession. Instead, on 29 July 1565, Mary married her cousin Henry, Lord Darnley (1545/6–67), son of *Margaret Douglas, Countess of Lennox, and next in the English succession. Elizabeth was furious and Moray raised an unsuccessful rebellion. Mary’s chances of agreement with England had all but vanished, irreparably weakening her position now that her enemies could expect English backing. Darnley proved an incapable consort, being violent and irresponsible, and the marriage broke down within months. When Mary decided to forfeit (confiscate the lands and goods of ) the exiled Moray and his friends, their sympathisers (notably the Earl of Morton) gained Darnley’s support for a coup. They captured the pregnant queen in Holyroodhouse on 9 March 1566 and killed her confidant David Riccio. Mary escaped and rallied supporters, including James Hepburn, Earl of Bothwell (1534/5–78), who restored her at the price of rehabilitating Moray. Mary’s son, later James VI and I, was born on 19 June. Later that year she suffered from physical illness, exacerbated by depression at the Darnley problem and the faction-ridden state of Scottish politics. The murder of Darnley on 10 February 1567 looks like Bothwell’s and Morton’s attempt to reconcile their differences through an honourable revenge killing. Mary suffered a nervous breakdown after the murder. The idea of a Mary-Bothwell love affair, beloved of dramatists and novelists, rests only on the discredited ‘Casket Letters’ and is contradicted by all contemporary evidence. Bothwell’s political bid to marry the Queen gathered the support of Morton and many others. Mary, however, rejected Bothwell’s proposal. On 24 April, he made the disastrous mistake of abducting and raping her, thus forcing her into marriage on 15 May to save her honour. Other nobles were horrified, especially since this benefited nobody but Bothwell. An uprising followed,

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and Mary surrendered at Carberry on 15 June. The core of the anti-Bothwell coalition, now revealed as also anti-Mary, imprisoned her in Lochleven Castle, and deposed her on 24 July. Moray became regent for the infant James VI. Mary escaped on 2 May 1568 and gathered wide support, but Moray defeated her at Langside on 13 May. Failing to recognise that she still had many allies, Mary crossed to England to seek Elizabeth’s aid. Elizabeth distrusted Mary’s Catholic connections and recognised Moray as a friend. Reluctant to sanction rebellion, however, she tried to negotiate a conditional restoration. But Moray produced the fabricated ‘Casket Letters’, openly accusing Mary of murder, and leading Elizabeth to support him over his sister. Kept a prisoner in England, Mary pursued every possible route to freedom – offering concessions to Elizabeth, and simultaneously engaging in Catholic plots for her overthrow. The first, the Ridolfi plot of 1571, shattered her credibility with the Anglo-Scottish Protestant establishment. When her attempt to rebuild it with her ‘Association scheme’ for joint rule of Scotland with her son James (1581–4) failed, her plotting resumed. Convicted of complicity in the Babington plot in 1586, she was executed, despite Elizabeth’s reluctance, on 7 February 1587. Mary’s posthumous reputation has varied widely: martyr for Catholicism; murderous adulteress; fallible but sympathetic victim; or romantic heroine. With the abandonment of the idea of her complicity in Darnley’s murder, her political failure can be seen as the result of the impossible circumstances in which she found herself. jg • Donaldson, G. (1983) All the Queen’s Men: power and politics in Mary Stewart’s Scotland; ECSWW; Fraser, A. (1969) Mary Queen of Scots; Guy, J. A. (2004) My Heart is My Own: a life of Mary Queen of Scots; Lynch, M. (ed.) (1988) Mary Stewart: queen in three kingdoms; *ODNB (2004) (Bibl.); Warnicke, R. (2006) Mary Queen of Scots. MASON, Elliot Cranston, born

Glasgow 29 Jan. 1888, died Newchapel, Surrey 20 June 1947. Actor, occasional director. Daughter of Mary Cranston, and George Mason, optician. Elliot Mason, a niece of *Kate Cranston who ran the well-known Glasgow tearooms, began her career with the influential amateur company The Scottish National Players, appearing in their opening programme (13 Jan. 1921) as Anna MacDougall in the premiere of John Brandane’s and A. W. Yuill’s Glenforsa. Between 1921 and 1933, she acted in some seventy-four productions and

stage-managed or directed others. She was also a committee member and donor. Roles included Morag Gillespie in George Blake’s The Mother (13 April 1921), Mrs Duncan in Brandane’s The Glen is Mine (25 Jan. 1923), Maggie Groundwater in James Bridie’s Sunlight Sonata (20 March 1928), and Miss Soulis in his The Dancing Bear (24 Feb. 1931). Elliot Mason also directed Neil M. Gunn’s play The Ancient Fire, premiered at the Lyric Theatre Glasgow (Oct. 1929). An ambitious work, it combined a realistic depiction of working-class Glasgow with a mystical section in the Highlands. Contemporary reviews were unfavourable, focusing on Gunn’s lack of experience, but Mason’s production was described as ‘excellent’ (Scottish Theatre Archive). Like several contemporaries, Elliot Mason moved from the Players project into a professional career. Her independent means supported her theatrical apprenticeship, leading to a move to London and roles in the West End and in the cinema. Her film appearances included Mrs McNiff in The Ghost Goes West (René Clair, 1936), Mrs McCosh in On Approval (Clive Brook, 1944), Mrs Hemmings in Vacation from Marriage (Alexander Korda, 1945), and Mrs Lennox in The Captive Heart (Basil Dearden, 1948). AS • Glasgow Herald, 21 June 1949 (obit.), 1 July 1949; Marshalsay, K. A. (1991) ‘The Scottish National Players: in the nature of an experiment, 1913–34’, PhD thesis, Univ. of Glasgow.

born Edinburgh 6 May 1867, died Edinburgh 7 Dec. 1949. Campaigner and writer. Daughter of Emily Rosaline Orme (c. 1835–1915), and David Masson, Professor of English Literature at the University of Edinburgh. Rosaline Masson’s parents were supporters of female suffrage and women’s entry into higher education. In 1866, her mother signed the women’s suffrage petition: she subscribed to ENSWS, joining its committee in 1874 and becoming joint honorary secretary (with *Eliza Wigham) in 1877. David Masson (1822–1907) was on the platform of the first public meeting on female suffrage in Edinburgh (January 1870) and at the 1871 meeting addressed by J. S. Mill. He supported the ELEA from its foundation. Rosaline and her elder sister, Flora Masson (1856–1937) campaigned for female enfranchisement and joined the LEDS (Flora from 1881, Rosaline from 1890), thereby meeting other campaigners such as *Sarah Siddons Mair and *Flora and Louisa Stevenson. In 1913

MASSON, Rosaline,

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Rosaline Masson became honorary secretary of the CUWFA. She addressed meetings of the NUWSS (1912–13), and held office in the Edinburgh branch of its successor, the NSEC. Rosaline Masson was a prolific writer in various genres, including Scottish history, biography (Robert Louis Stevenson), literary criticism, travel literature (Edinburgh), and memories of famous people, notably Poets, Patriots and Lovers (1934), a collection of earlier articles. Flora Masson edited her father’s work after his death in 1907, and wrote on the Brontës and Charles Lamb. Both sisters wrote for the Cornhill Magazine, Chambers’s Journal, Blackwood’s Magazine and The Scotsman newspaper. Flora, a friend of Florence Nightingale, had trained as a nurse at the Nightingale School. She worked in hospitals in London and Oxford, returning to Edinburgh in the 1900s to care for her parents. She was awarded the Royal Red Cross First Class in 1919 for her war work as matron, then Commanding Officer, of the Red Cross hospital at Whitehill, Rosewell, Midlothian. The sisters lived together at 20 Ann Street, Edinburgh. jm c d

Commissary Court, Register of Testaments; Edinburgh Central Library: (microfilm) Edinburgh Old Parish Register, May 1737. WWEE.

• Masson, R., Works as above. AGC; Edinburgh Evening News, 2 Oct. 1937 (obit. Flora); The Scotsman, 2 Oct. 1937; The Weekly Scotsman, 18 Feb. 1933; WSM; WWW (4th edn., 1967), vols III and IV.

born 1709, died Edinburgh 6 July 1737. Shopkeeper. Daughter of Elizabeth Bowie, and George Masterton, tanner burgess. Margaret Masterton was apprenticed at 16 to Janet Justice, shopkeeper in the High Exchange, Edinburgh, where many women had small shops. Her indenture stipulated she was to live at home, serving her mistress ‘. . . faithfully minding on her Chop in the Exchange and in shewing [sewing] all such needlework as she shall happen to be imployed in or is capable of . . .’ (Register House Papers series). She established her own Lawnmarket shop, selling fabric and accessories, gloves, ribbons and children’s clothes, and continued trading after marrying William Yuill, stabler, in 1735. Her sister Katherine also married a stabler, William Tennent. Both men became burgesses through their wives. In 1737, Margaret Masterton and William Yuill drew up a post-nuptial marriage contract, providing for their daughter Elizabeth, born on 2 May. Margaret Masterton died soon afterwards. ecs

MASTERTON, Margaret,

• NRS: RH9/17/298, Register House Papers series (Apprentice Indenture); CC8/4/639/1, Edinburgh Commissary Court Processes; CC8/8/99, Edinburgh

MATHESON, Katherine Bell (Kay),‡ born Inverasdale, Wester Ross 7 Dec. 1928, died Aultbea 6 July 2013. Participant in retrieval of Stone of Scone from Westminster Abbey, Christmas Day 1950. Daughter of Margaret MacKenzie, and John Matheson, marine engineer. Kay Matheson trained as a teacher of home economics in Glasgow. Joining the non-party Scottish Covenant Association which supported home rule within the UK, she met law student Ian Hamilton, who had campaigned successfully for the election of Covenant leader John MacCormick as Lord Rector of Glasgow University. Ian Hamilton gained unofficial support from prominent sympathisers for his scheme to retrieve the Stone of Scone. This sandstone block on which ancient Scottish kings were inaugurated had been carried south by Edward I and built into the coronation chair in Westminster Abbey. Recruiting fellow-students Gavin Vernon and Alan Stuart, Ian Hamilton persuaded Kay Matheson to act as driver and decoy in a hired getaway car. She later said: ‘there were only two girls in the Nationalist Movement mad enough to take part in the raid’ (The Telegraph 2013). The bold plan quickly ran into problems. During its move, the Stone fell into two unequal pieces: as Ian Hamilton carried one part to the car, Kay Matheson spotted a policeman approaching and the pair quickly posed as young lovers, keeping him in conversation, while the others dragged away the bulkier portion. Having driven off alone to find a haven for her section of the stone, Kay Matheson returned home by train to avoid Border checks, her two broken toes a lifelong souvenir. Reports of the exploit read like a comic thriller, and won sympathy for the reivers and their cause. English police eventually tracked down those involved and the Stone was later returned to London. Kay Matheson was interviewed for five hours but no charges were ever brought. When in 1996 the Queen granted the Stone’s return to Scotland, Kay Matheson was the only one of the four to attend its installation at Edinburgh Castle. Regarded as a heroine, she continued teaching in Highland schools and working for nationalist causes, saying: ‘Our recovery – not theft – of the Stone informed our whole lives’ (The Scotsman 2013). JMR

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adorned the dignity of their race’ (Anderson 1922, vol. i, pp. 54–5). ram

• Gerber, P. (1992) The Search for the Stone of Destiny; Hamilton, I. R. (1952) No Stone Unturned; MacCormick, J. (1955) The Flag in the Wind; The Herald, 9 July 2013, The Scotsman, 8 July 2013, The Telegraph, 14 July 2013 (obits).

born c. 1080, died Westminster 1 May 1118. Queen of England. Daughter of *Margaret, Saint, Queen of Scotland, and Malcolm III ‘Canmore’. Matilda and her sister Mary of Boulogne (c. 1082–1115) were educated at West Saxon nunneries and were probably among the most cultured women of their day. Controversy over whether or not Matilda had taken the veil did not prevent her from marrying Henry I of England (1068/9–1135) in 1100. Contemporary writers noted the union’s dynastic significance, since, through her mother, Matilda was descended from the pre-Norman royal dynasty. The marriage also affected Matilda’s siblings, especially the future David I, whose fortunes rose and who became a close confidant of Henry I. Arguably, Matilda’s marriage helped to consolidate the nascent ‘Canmore dynasty’. Matilda was prominent on the Anglo-Norman and European scene. She corresponded with the Pope and Archbishop Anselm and was active in government, administering the kingdom during Henry’s frequent absences. She supported the establishment of the Augustinian canons in England and Scotland, becoming known as ‘Mold the gode quene’. She was particularly noted for piety and devotion to the poor and lepers, founding a leprosarium in 1101 at St Giles-in-the-Fields, Holborn, near London. She was a renowned patroness of the arts. The work most often associated with her is a Life of Margaret (her mother), written early in Matilda’s reign, possibly as instruction for the young queen. Matilda and Henry had two children. When Matilda died in 1118, her lavish funeral was attended by many notables. She was buried at Westminster Abbey. Their daughter, Empress Maud, claimed the English throne after Henry’s death in 1135, pitting herself against Stephen of Blois and his wife, Matilda of Boulogne, daughter of Mary, who had married Eustace of Boulogne (d. after 1125) in 1102. A Scottish king-list, which paid considerable attention to Matilda and Mary, remarked of them that: ‘By their marriages, by the ingenuousness of their customs, by the greatness of their knowledge, by their generous distribution of temporal things to the churches, they fittingly MATILDA (Edith) of Scotland,

• Anderson, A. O. (ed.) (1922) Early Sources of Scottish History ad 500 to 1286, (ed.) (1908) Scottish Annals from English Chroniclers ad 500 to 1286; Huneycutt, L. (1989) ‘The idea of the perfect princess’ Anglo-Norman Studies 12; (2003) Matilda of Scotland; ODNB (2004); Ritchie, R. L. G. (1954) The Normans in Scotland; Schmitt, F. S. (ed.) (1940–4) The Letters of St Anselm; Wright, W. A. (ed.) (1887) The Metrical Chronicle of Robert of Gloucester. MAUD (Matilda) de Senlis, Queen of Scotland, formerly Countess of Huntingdon, born between 1071 and 1075, died 1130 or 1131. Daughter of Judith, niece of William I of England, and Waltheof, Earl of Northumbria. Following her father’s death in 1076, Maud became heir to extensive English lands, mainly in Huntingdonshire and Northamptonshire. These lands were held by her mother, Countess Judith, until Maud’s betrothal, c. 1086, and subsequent marriage to Simon de Senlis, son of a Norman baron and a supporter of Henry I. There were two sons from this marriage, Simon (II), later Earl of Northampton, and Waldef, abbot of Melrose, and a daughter, Matilda. Maud de Senlis and her husband supported various monastic establishments, particularly the Cluniac foundation at Northampton and the convent at Elstow founded by her mother Judith. Her association with the priory at Daventry was continued by her daughter Matilda. Simon de Senlis died in 1111 at La Charitésur-Loire, on his second Crusade. In December 1113 or early 1114, Maud de Senlis married David (c. 1085–1153), future King of Scots. The lands and titles received by David as a result of this marriage, and the family associations that Queen Maud brought to the union, had an important impact on the claims of successive generations of Scottish kings. Their son, Henry, born in the early years of the marriage, was himself the father of two kings, Malcolm IV (r. 1153–65) and William (r. 1165–1214). Throughout her marriage to David, Maud continued to support the religious foundations she had patronised with her first husband and was also joint grantor, or witness, to several of David’s charters involving other establishments. She was buried at Scone in Perthshire. kam

• Anderson, A. O. and Anderson, M. O. (eds) [1922] (1990) Early Sources of Scottish History; Barrow, G. W. S. (1973) The Kingdom of the Scots, (1999) (ed.) The Charters of King David I ; Forrest, S. S. (1952) ‘Earl Waltheof of Northumbria’,

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MAXWELL Archaeologica Aeliana, 4th series, 30; Green, J. (1997) The Aristocracy of Norman England. MAXWELL, Alice Maude, born Cardoness 17 Nov. 1856, died Edinburgh 5 Feb. 1915. Deaconess. Daughter of Louisa Shakerley, and Sir William Maxwell of Cardoness, baronet. Alice Maxwell had a comfortable upbringing as member of a rural landed family, prominent in the parish church. She nursed her father in his final years. In the 1880s, moves to organise women’s work in the Church of Scotland culminated in the national Woman’s Guild (1887). *Catherine Charteris was the first President of the Guild, and her husband Archibald its founder. He included a new Order of Deaconesses at the apex of his scheme; the intention was to encourage ‘ladies of social standing’ to devote themselves to full-time service on behalf of the church. Alice Maxwell’s minister recommended her as a suitable superintendent for the proposed Deaconess Institute. She accepted with some reluctance, and on 13 January 1888 became the second woman to be ‘set apart’ as a DCS (the first was *Grisell Baillie). Her task was to develop training to prepare women for a distinctive ‘female ministry’, under an ethos deeply influenced by Florence Nightingale’s vision of nursing as both a science and a Christian occupation for women. Until retirement in 1911, Alice Maxwell developed a programme of theoretical education linked with practical work in the slums of the Pleasance, Edinburgh, and helped establish new missions and institutions, including the Deaconess Hospital (1894). Quiet but forceful, she opened up significant new fields of opportunity and social service for some women, while confirming the ultimately subordinate and class-defined character of the new order. This was illustrated in her 1904 call for volunteers from women who were free of domestic ties to offer their efforts and money to build up the church. lo

• Macrae, Mrs H. (1919) Alice Maxwell, Deaconess; Magnusson, M. (1987) Out of Silence ; Macdonald, L. A. O. (2000) A Unique and Glorious Mission. MAXWELL, Darcy (Lady Maxwell of Pollok) n. Brisbane, born c. 1742 at Largs, Ayrshire, died

Edinburgh 2 July 1810. Methodist leader and philanthropist. Daughter of Isabel Nicolson, and Thomas Brisbane, landowner. Educated at home and in Edinburgh, Darcy Brisbane married Sir Walter Maxwell of Pollok

on 19 Feb. 1760; two years later he and their only child were dead. After this double bereavement, Lady Maxwell experienced evangelical conversion, dedicating herself to God. Moving to Edinburgh, in 1764 she began a lifelong friendship with John Wesley. She was committed to an Arminian theology of universal salvation through faith, unlike her close friend, the evangelical Calvinist *Lady Glenorchy. A leading figure among Edinburgh Methodists, Lady Maxwell attended the Wesleyan chapel and prayer meetings there. In July 1770 she established and supervised a charity school for poor children in Edinburgh. An admirer of Robert Raikes’s work on Sunday Schools in Gloucester, in June 1787 she founded one in Edinburgh, believing it the first in Scotland, although others were also established that year. Disregarding their theological differences, on her death in 1786 Lady Glenorchy appointed Lady Maxwell her sole executrix, leaving her the management of many chapels and the disposal of over £30,000 for benevolent and religious purposes, a task she achieved successfully. JR • Brown, C. (1981) ‘The Sunday-school movement in Scotland, 1780–1914’, Records of the Scottish Church History Society, 21, pp. 3–26; Lancaster, J. (1821) The Life of Darcy, Lady Maxwell, of Pollock; Late of Edinburgh: compiled from her voluminous diary and correspondence, and from other authentic documents; ODNB (2004).

m. Gordon, born Edinburgh c. 1749, died London 14 April 1812. Political hostess, agricultural reformer. Daughter of Magdalen Blair of Blair, and Sir William Maxwell of Monreith, Bart. Brought up in her parents’ house in Hyndford’s Close, Edinburgh, Jane Maxwell was a boisterous child. A favourite anecdote tells how she and her sister Betty (later *Lady Eglinton Wallace of Craigie), as small girls rode pigs from a nearby wynd. She grew up to be a great beauty and on 28 October 1767 married Alexander, 4th Duke of Gordon (1743–1827), reputedly one of the most handsome young men of his time. They had two sons and five daughters, but she did not content herself with staying quietly at Gordon Castle. Intelligent and witty, although criticised for her coarse speech, she famously assisted her husband in raising the 89th Regiment of Foot in 1794, and she greatly enjoyed the time they spent at the house they rented in Pall Mall, London. The Duke was a leading supporter of William Pitt and the Duchess soon became a confidante of the prime minister,

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at the centre of Tory society and delighting and shocking her friends with her unconventional remarks. She was also active in the management of the Gordon estates and was influenced by contemporary ideas on agricultural improvement. She was involved in plans to introduce flax growing and the linen industry, in ­establishing the village at Kingussie, and in instituting the Badenoch and Strathspey Farming Society in 1803. An enthusiastic matchmaker, she failed to marry her eldest daughter to Pitt himself but, thanks to her efforts, three daughters married dukes and the fourth a marquis. In 1802, she went to Paris in an unsuccessful attempt to interest Eugène de Beauharnais in her youngest daughter, Georgiana. When she returned, her enemies declared that she had boasted that she hoped to see Napoleon have breakfast in Ireland, dinner in London and supper at Gordon Castle. This earned her a good deal of unpopularity and by 1804 she had become estranged from her husband, who had a large family by his mistress, Jane Christie of Fochabers. The Duchess then led a peripatetic existence, dividing her time between London, Edinburgh, where she was regarded as the arbiter of fashion, and a small house in the Highlands at Kinrara where she entertained visitors including *Elizabeth Grant of Rothiemurchus. She died aged 63 in Pultenay’s Hotel, Piccadilly, surrounded by her children, and at her own request was buried at Kinrara. A highly successful political and society hostess, she has rightly been remembered as a woman of unusual character and ability. rkm • Carr, R. (2013) ‘Women, land and power: a case for continuity’, WECS; Craven, M. (1906) Famous Beauties of Two Reigns; Guild, J. W. (ed.) (1864) An Autobiographical Chapter in the life of Jane, Duchess of Gordon; ODNB (2004) (see Gordon, Jane); Robinson, M. (c. 1900) Beaux and Belles of England; SP; WoM; Wraxall, N. W. (1836) Posthumous Memoirs of his own Time. MAXWELL, Lady Winifred, Countess of Nithsdale, n. Herbert, born Powis Castle, Wales, 1672, died

Rome May 1749. Jacobite. Daughter of Elizabeth Somerset, and William Herbert, 2nd Marquess, 3rd Baron Powis. Winifred Herbert was born into the Welsh landowning aristocracy. When William of Orange took the throne in 1688 her devoutly Catholic parents accompanied the Stuart royal family into exile, her mother, Lady Powis, being appointed governess to the infant Prince of Wales, later known as the Old Pretender. Joining the Stuart court at St

Germain in 1691, Winifred Herbert became a ladyin-waiting to Mary of Modena and in 1699, aged 27, married William Maxwell, 5th Earl of Nithsdale (1676–1744). Returning to Scotland to live with him at his family seat of Terregles, she suffered repeated miscarriages and stillbirths. One son and one daughter survived to adulthood. When her husband was sentenced to death for treason for his part in the 1715 Jacobite Rising, Lady Nithsdale petitioned King George I for clemency. Fearful that this would not be granted, she hatched the plot which freed her husband from the Tower of London on 22 February 1716, the eve of the day planned for his execution. Its boldness and success made her famous in her own time. With the aid of two women friends, she disguised her husband in female clothes and led him out past the guards, handing him over to her maidservant and lifelong companion Cecelia Evans. She returned to Scotland to retrieve family belongings before joining her husband in France in September 1716, miscarrying during the difficult voyage. Lord and Lady Nithsdale spent the rest of their lives at the Stuart court-in-exile in Italy. Appointed governess to Prince Henry, younger brother of Prince Charles Edward, Lady Nithsdale played an important role in the early upbringing of both children. mec • Maxwell Stuart, F. (1995) Lady Nithsdale and the Jacobites; ODNB (2004); Tayler, H. (1939) Lady Nithsdale and her Family. MAYO, Isabella, n. Fyvie [Edward Garrett], born London 10 Dec. 1843, died Aberdeen 13 May 1914. Writer, Tolstoyan and anti-racism campaigner. Daughter of Margaret Thomson, and George Fyvie, baker, from Aberdeenshire. Youngest of eight children (five of whom died young), at age 16 Isabella Fyvie began working to pay off a family debt of £800, obtaining jobs from the Langham Place employment register as secretary and law writer before becoming an author. The debt cleared and in 1870 she married John Ryall Mayo, a London solicitor (d. 1877). After his death she moved to Aberdeen where she took in lodgers and continued writing to support herself and her son. She retained her maiden name and wrote as ‘Isabella Fyvie Mayo’, though much of her early published work appeared under the pseudonym ‘Edward Garrett’. This included poetry, articles, short stories and novels, much of it first appearing in the religious press. From the 1890s she became outspoken in her support for Tolstoyan causes: anti-militarism,

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anti-racism, anti-imperialism, anti-vivisection, anti-industrialism and vegetarianism and she ­contributed to socialist, co-operative and radical journals. In 1893 she co-founded an anti-racism organisation, the Society for the Recognition of the Brotherhood of Man, at a meeting attended by anti-racism reformer Catherine Impey (1847–1923) and black American journalist and anti-lynching campaigner Ida Bell Wells-Barnett (1862–1931). Shortly afterwards, a dispute between Isabella Fyvie Mayo and Catherine Impey created a split in the society. In 1894 Isabella Fyvie Mayo was elected to the Aberdeen School Board as a Trades Council representative, the first female member of any public board in the city. Her opposition to the South African War resulted in her house being stoned. By 1901 she was assisting Tolstoy’s colleague Vladimir Grigor’evich Chertkov with the phrasing of English translations of Tolstoy’s works and appending her own notes applying Tolstoy’s political analysis to the British Empire. From 1910, at Chertkov’s request, she corresponded with Mohandas Gandhi in South Africa, and she subsequently promoted Gandhi’s seminal (and banned) work Indian Home Rule. She was also in contact with black British, African and African American activists. She was active in the Scottish Society for the Prevention of Vivisection, founded 1911 (now OneKind). She was buried in Coldharbour churchyard, Surrey, with her husband. LRM

the first woman to graduate from Sandhurst Staff College, to attend the National Defence College (1976) and to go to the Royal College of Defence Studies (1986), she was a trailblazer in a previously male domain, paving the way for other women to follow her lead. Helen Meechie was commissioned into the WRAC in 1960 under the graduate entry scheme and was promoted to Lieutenant-Colonel in 1976 and to Commander WRAC Army of the Rhine in 1979, where she was stationed near the Berlin Wall. She also served in Cyprus and Hong Kong. She was appointed Director of the WRAC in 1982, made an honorary aide-de-camp to Queen Elizabeth and was tasked with preparing for the amalgamation of the women’s service into the all-male army (completed with the disbanding of the WRAC on 6 April 1992). After stepping down from her role as Director in 1986, she was made a CBE, appointed Deputy Director General for personnel services, and retired from the Army aged 53 in 1991. She became Vice President and Chairwoman of the WRAC Association and received an honorary doctorate from the University of Dundee in 1986. JSP • King’s College London, Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives: GB 0099 KCLMA Meechie. The Herald, 5 Sept. 2000 (obit.); Supplement to the London Gazette, 14 June 1986.

• Fyvie Mayo, I. (1910) Recollections of What I Saw . . . (Bibl.). Aberdeen Daily Journal, 14 May 1914, Aberdeen Free Press, 14 May 1914 (obits); Bressey, C. (2013) Empire, Race and the Politics of Anti-Caste; HSWW (select Bibl.); Moore, L. (2013) ‘“A notable personality”: Isabella Fyvie Mayo in the public and private spheres of Aberdeen’, Wom. Hist. Rev., 22 (2), pp. 239–52; Moore, L. (2014) ‘From Russia with Love: Tolstoy, Gandhi and Isabella Fyvie Mayo’, Text, Book, Publishing, 2 (6), Dec., pp. 56–71; ODNB (2004).

fl. 1390s. Harper. All that is known of this musician is from three references in the Aberdeen Burgh Records for the years 1398–1400, in one of which she is described as ‘Meg of Abernethy, harper’. It is not known which Abernethy is referred to, the Abernethy in Perthshire or that near Grantown-on-Spey. The entries are significant, however, in that they indicate that it was possible for women to join the ranks of professional harp players. jp

MEECHIE, Helen Guild, CBE, born

• Dickinson, W. C. (ed.) (1957) Early Records of the Burgh of Aberdeen, 1317, 1398–1407, pp. 86–91.

Dundee 19 Jan. 1938, died Wiltshire 24 Aug. 2000. Director of Women’s Royal Army Corps (WRAC). Daughter of Robina Guild Robertson, and John Strachan Meechie, salesman. Helen Meechie graduated with a masters degree in Modern Languages from the University of St Andrews, where her involvement in the army first started, as a member of the Officer Training Corps. Having secured a teaching diploma from Dundee College of Education, she went on to pursue a highly successful military career. She became the highest-ranking woman in the British Army. As

MEG of Abernethy,

MELVILLE, Elizabeth (Lady Culross), c. 1578–c. 1640. Poet. Daughter of Christian Boswell of Balmuto, and Sir James Melville of Halhill, ambassador, minor statesman and memoirist. Nothing is known of this major poet’s education, presumably received at home (Halhill Tower, near Colessie in Fife). The dates of her birth, marriage and death, and those of her children, are likewise unknown, due to loss of family papers and kirk registers. She married John Colville, eldest son of Alexander, Commendator of Culross, before

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5 February 1597. In February 1599, describing her as a ’faithfull, vertuous ladie, a tender youth’, the ­poet-pastor Alexander Hume acknowledged her as a prolific and masterly poet (Reid Baxter 2017, p. 46). Her husband, titular Commendator of Culross 1597–1609, was laird of West Comrie near Culross; he was never ‘Lord Colville’. The couple had at least five sons and two daughters; the eldest son, Dr Alexander Colville (d. 1662), taught in France and at St Andrews, while the youngest, Samuel, published both satirical verse and theological prose. All Elizabeth Melville’s extant poems, totalling some 4,300 lines of Scots-language verse, appear to have been written by 1610. Like the spiritual verse of John Donne, her poetry explores the vicissitudes of the human soul’s relationship with the deity. Written with impressive technical mastery in a wide range of poetic forms, her poems range from 10 to over 400 lines. At least six were written to be sung to pre-existing melodies. Twelve letters (1625; 1629–32) survive from what was clearly a vast correspondence; four from noted religious writer Samuel Rutherford were published in 1664. Elizabeth Melville was long known only as author of the long narrative poem Ane Godlie Dreame, first published in 1603 and at least twelve times thereafter by 1735, and a single manuscript sonnet addressed to the minister John Welsh, imprisoned in Blackness Castle, 1605–6. The 2002 discovery of a large manuscript collection of her verse, dedicated to Isobell Cor, led to the identification of other poems. There is now abundant circumstantial evidence that she was one of the most significant members of a group of de jure Presbyterian poets in Fife which flourished around 1600, centred on James Melville (no relation), minister of Kilrennie. In 2014, Germaine Greer unveiled an inscribed flagstone commemorating her in Makars’ Court in Edinburgh. JRB • Melville, E., Work as above. Rutherford, S. (1891) Letters, A. Bonar (ed.); ECSWW; ODNB (2004); Reid Baxter, J. (2010) Poems of Elizabeth Melville, (2017) ‘Elizabeth Melville, Lady Culross: New Light from Fife’, Innes Review 68, 1. MELVILLE, Frances Helen, OBE, born Edinburgh 11 Oct. 1873, died Edinburgh 7 March 1962. Academic, educational administrator, suffragist. Daughter of Helen A. Kerr, and Francis Suther Melville, Assistant Clerk of Session. Educated at George Watson’s College and the University of Edinburgh (MA, 1897), Frances

Melville’s first post was as philosophy tutor at the latter (1896–9). She succeeded *Louisa Lumsden as Warden of University Hall, St Andrews, in 1900, and in 1909 was appointed Mistress of Queen Margaret College, University of Glasgow. The post carried responsibility for all women students in the university, and she held it until the college closed in 1935. She was the first woman to be awarded a BD degree in Scotland (St Andrews, 1910). President of the BFUW and a member of the Glasgow and West of Scotland Provincial Committee for the Training of Teachers, she also chaired the committee of the Queen Margaret College Settlement Association for 24 years. The most senior woman academic in Scotland, she was an important constitutional suffragist, holding posts in several suffrage societies. In 1906, she was one of five women who initiated the Scottish women graduates’ lawsuit, which they pursued up to the House of Lords. During the First World War, Frances Melville undertook a range of responsible advisory activities relating to war work and women’s training and was a member of the British Committee of the Women’s International Congress of 1915. She later joined the GSEC, the WCA, the Soroptimist Club (president 1931–2), and was vice-president of the Fellowship of Equal Service, founded c. 1930 to secure the ordination of women and equal opportunity in church life. As Independent candidate in the Scottish Universities’ by-election 1937, she came second in a four-cornered contest including *Chrystal Macmillan. In retirement at Dalry, Kirkcudbrightshire, she drove her car with uncharacteristic abandon around the country lanes for the LDV during the Second World War. A sought-after public speaker, Frances Melville was critical of society’s ‘acquiescence in a double burden of education for women, and a doublefaced ideal’ (Melville 1911, p. 134). Her fine academic and outstanding administrative abilities, refined culture and impressive personality enabled her to be firmly and at times publicly critical of the universities and other masculinist institutions, while retaining their confidence and respect. She was the first Scottish woman graduate to receive the honorary degree of LLD (Glasgow, 1927). A women’s hall of residence was named after her, and the Frances Melville medal is still awarded to students of philosophy. lrm • Univ. of Glasgow Archives: DC233 (typescripts, corr. with Phoebe Shervyn, 1924); Univ. of St Andrews Dept. of Rare Books and Muniments: UY 37781 (memoranda, corr.).

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MICHIE Melville, F. (1902) ‘University education for women in Scotland: its effects on social and intellectual life’, (1911) ‘The education of woman’, in The Position of Women: Actual and Ideal, pp. 118–34. AGC ; The Alumnus Chronicle of the University of St Andrews, VIII, 1957–62, pp. 45–6; Dyhouse, C. (1995) No Distinction of Sex? Women in British universities 1870–1939; Glasgow Herald, 8 March 1935, 16 Nov. 1935, 8 March 1962 (obit.); MacDonald, L. A. O. (2000) A Unique and Glorious Mission; ODNB (2004); SB; St Andrews Citizen, 8 June 1935; The Times, 14 March 1962 (obit.); http://titan.glo.be/~bea/ glashome.html

fl. 1234–60. Daughter of Maurice, Earl of Menteith. Isabella, Countess of Menteith, heiress to her father, had delivered the earldom to her husband Walter Comyn by 1234. One of the kingdom’s most powerful magnates, Walter Comyn died in November 1258. She soon married Sir John Russell, an obscure English knight, apparently against the rival offers of Scottish nobles. A group of Scottish nobles led by the Comyns accused her of murder and had the pair imprisoned. Fleeing to England by 1260, they petitioned the Pope, who sent an envoy to York, but his summons was met with disdain by the Scottish king and aristocracy. Walter ‘Bailloch’ Stewart, whose wife Mary was probably Isabella’s cousin, then gained the earldom. Isabella’s further efforts with Henry III and the Pope to reclaim the earldom and prove her innocence did not succeed. Her daughter married into the Comyn family. mhh

MENTEITH, Isabella, Countess of,

• Anderson, A. O. (ed.) (1908) Scottish Annals from English Chroniclers; Bliss, W. H. (ed.) (1893) Calendar of Entries in the Papal Registers: Papal Letters, vol. 1, 1198–1304; Duncan, A. A. M. (1975) Scotland: the making of the kingdom; Fraser, W. (1880) Red Book of Menteith, vol. 2. MENTEITH, Joanna, Countess of Strathearn, fl. 1323–66. Daughter of Sir John Menteith. Joanna Menteith’s life is remarkable chiefly for the unusual circumstances under which she twice became Countess of Strathearn. Her first marriage, c. 1323, was to Malise IV, Earl of Strathearn (c. 1277–c. 1328). Soon after his death (without issue by her) in 1329 or 1330 she married John Campbell, Earl of Atholl (d. 1333), who was killed at the battle of Halidon Hill in 1333. In 1339 she obtained papal dispensation to marry Sir Maurice Moray of Drumsagard (d. 1346), a prominent Strathearn landholder. When the last Gaelic Earl of Strathearn was forfeited, David

II awarded the title to Sir Maurice, and Joanna thus became Countess of Strathearn for a second time. Although she later married William, Earl of Sutherland (d. 1370/1), until her death around 1366 she most often identified herself with the lordship of Strathearn. cjn • Neville, C. J. (1983) ‘The Earls of Strathearn . . .’, PhD, Univ. of Aberdeen; SP. MICHIE, Janet (Ray), (Baroness Michie of Gallanach), n. Bannerman, born Balmaha

4 Feb. 1934, died Oban 6 May 2008. Speech therapist and politician. Daughter of Jenny Murray (Ray) Mundell, and John Bannerman (later Lord Bannerman of Kildonan), farm manager and Liberal politician. Ray Bannerman was educated at Aberdeen High School for Girls, Landsdowne House, Edinburgh, and the Edinburgh School of Speech Therapy. It was as chair of the Edinburgh Highland Society that she met her husband, Dr Iain Michie, who was serving in the RAMC. They had three daughters and lived an army life for 16 years before settling in Oban, where Ray Michie became Area Speech Therapist for the Argyll and Clyde Health Board in 1977. She soon became active in Liberal politics and stood for Parliament in 1979 and 1983 in Argyll and Bute, eventually being elected the first Scottish woman Liberal MP in 1987. She was reelected twice more, reflecting her commitment to her constituents. In the Commons, Ray Michie held many appointments, including as a member of the Select Committee on Scottish Affairs. She was a passionate supporter of Scottish Home Rule and pursued a number of issues, including the loss of the fishing vessel the Antares and the fatal Chinook crash on the Mull of Kintyre, not only because of their public importance, but also because she understood what it meant to the families of those who had lost their lives. She held honorary posts in An Comunn Gaidhealach, the Scottish National Farmers’ Union, the Scottish Crofting Foundation, and the Clyde Fishermen’s Association. In 2001, on stepping down from being an MP, she was made a life peer, and Baroness Michie of Gallanach became the first person to take the oath of allegiance to the House of Lords in Gaelic, having long been an energetic promoter of the language. DM i

• The Herald, 8 May 2008, The Scotsman, 8 May 2008 (obits); eODNB.

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MILLAR MILLAR, Ella Morison,

n. Inches, born Edinburgh 26 June 1869, died Edinburgh 23 Feb. 1959. Politician. Daughter of Mary Gray Morison, and Sir Robert Kirk Inches, master goldsmith and Lord Provost of Edinburgh 1912–16. Ella Inches married Thomas John Millar in 1898 and had one daughter. Her civic career began when she assisted her father during his term as Lord Provost, and her work for the Lord Provost’s Comfort Fund for troops during the Great War brought her particular renown. In January 1919, she was returned at a by-election for Edinburgh Council’s Morningside Ward, thus becoming Scotland’s first female city councillor. Her popularity was such that she was returned unopposed at all eight of the subsequent elections that she contested. Initially elected without a party label, she soon became identified with the Council’s centre-right grouping (eventually known as the Progressives). She was also a notable member of the Unionist Party, and a prolific campaigner for it in parliamentary elections. In 1923 she made further history when her fellow councillors elected her as a bailie, thereby making her the first female magistrate in a Scottish city. Hailed as the ‘Mother of the Council’, she retired as councillor in May 1949. KJWB

microanalysis of rocks and metals, she went on to produce in 1928 the first-ever sample of pure phosphorus trioxide, and to explain the characteristic glow, earning her the RSE Keith Prize. The citation included an expert view that it was ‘the most important advance made in the last 20 years’. Chrissie Miller graduated DSc before she was 30 (her secret ambition) with a much-praised thesis. But she had lost an eye in a lab explosion, so chose to continue as lecturer and then director of the inorganic laboratory at Heriot-Watt, supervising a procession of good research students. As teacher and supervisor, she was scrupulous and exacting, inspiring logical thinking and intense debate and ‘switching off her hearing aid only in the most extreme of situations’ (RSE website). During the Second World War, she worked for the war department on gas detection and sample analysis. In 1949, she was the only chemist among the first five women Fellows of the RSE, and in 1951 the only woman among the twenty-five Foundation Fellows of Heriot-Watt College. She took early retirement in 1961 because of hearing problems and family commitments (semi-invalid mother and sister). Had she been less self-effacing, some thought, she would have been Britain’s first professor of analytic chemistry. SR

• Edinburgh Room, Edinburgh Central Library: Biography Press Cuttings Men-Mit vol. 1; NLS: Acc. 10424 Scottish Unionist Association Papers. Baxter, K. (2008) ‘“Estimable and gifted”? Women in party politics in Scotland c. 1918–1955’, PhD, Univ. of Dundee, (2013) ‘“The advent of a woman candidate was seen . . . as outrageous”: women, party politics and elections in interwar Scotland and England’, Journal of Scottish Historical Studies 33, 2, pp. 260–83; The Scotsman (various issues).

• The Guardian, 30 July 2001 (obit.), and longer version on RSE website: www.royalsoced.org.uk/fellowship/obits/2004/ ccmiller; Rayner-Canham, M. F. (2008) Chemistry Was Their Life: pioneering British chemists, 1880–1949.

FRSE, born Coatbridge 29 Aug. 1899, died Edinburgh 16 July 2001. Research chemist. Daughter of Jessie Copland, and Alexander Miller, stationmaster. Rubella at age five left Chrissie Miller with impaired hearing. She was good at maths, but school-teaching was barred by her deafness, and a magazine article suggesting industrial analytical chemistry as a career for girls led her to study chemistry at the University of Edinburgh and Heriot-Watt College. She followed the compressed wartime courses (1917 to 1920), graduating with BSc (distinction) and diploma. Her first doctorate, with Carnegie funding (1921–2), was with Sir James Walker. In difficult conditions (the chemistry building was still under construction), she used her own glass-blown equipment. Devoting herself to the

MILLER, Christina Cruickshank (Chrissie),

born Saltcoats, Ayrshire, 11 June 1792, died Saltcoats 12 May 1864. Shipmaster and owner, Saltcoats and Ardrossan. Daughter of Mary Garret, and Captain William Miller, merchant and mariner. The eldest of eight children, Betsy Miller was first employed in the family timber-exporting business as the on-shore clerk and book-keeper. The tragic drowning of her two brothers in separate incidents left the family with a large trading brig, the Clytus, without a master. Faced with rapidly mounting debts, her aged father gave way to her request to take over command of the brig in 1827. For over thirty years, Captain Betsy Miller sailed between Ayrshire and Ireland in all seasons. As the first woman to be certified by the Board of Trade, her abilities were honourably mentioned in the House of Commons during the debate on the Merchant Shipping Act (1834). Local legend has it that when faced with almost certain shipwreck in Irvine bay during the great winter storm of 1839, she calmed her panicking crew with the jibe: ‘Lads,

MILLER, Elizabeth (Betsy),

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I’ll gang below and put on a clean sark [chemise] for I wud like to be flung up on the sauns [sands] kin’ o’ decent – Irvine folks are nasty noticing buddies!’ (Jack 1989, p. 48). She relinquished her command to her younger sister Hannah when she was 71, having restored the family fortunes. ejg • Lloyd’s Register of Shipping (1835–45). Ardrossan & Saltcoats Herald, 14 May 1864 (obit.); Carragher, P. C. (1909) Saltcoats: old and new; Jack, W. (1989) ‘The Captain was a Lady’, The Scots Magazine, Oct.; www. naheritagetrails.co.uk MILLER, Emily, born

Govan 10 March 1871, died Newton Mearns 10 March 1962. Police officer and nurse. Daughter of Ann Gallacher, and John Miller, pianoforte maker and cabinet maker. According to census records, Emily Miller worked as a nurse at Glasgow Royal Infirmary (in 1901) and then Greenock Poorhouse and Asylum (in 1911); she carried out investigative work for the Glasgow branch of the National Vigilance Association c. 1910–15. She became the first female officer to be employed by a police force in Scotland on 6 September 1915 when she was appointed as an Investigation Officer, attached to the Criminal Investigation Department of Glasgow City Police to take statements from women and children in cases of sexual assault. Emily Miller worked in plainclothes only, unlike Jane (known as Jean) Thomson, n. Forsyth Wright (1881–1964) who was the first woman to be employed in uniform by a Scottish police force (from 1918 to 1922) in Dundee. In March 1920 both Emily Miller and Jean Thomson gave evidence to the Departmental Committee on the Employment of Women on Police Duties. Both argued that female officers should be given the same status as men, including equal pay, pensions and powers of arrest, none of which they had at the time. Emily Miller left Glasgow City Police in 1924, but went on to give evidence to the Departmental Committee on Sexual Offences against Children and Young People in Scotland in March 1925. Her death certificate recorded her occupation as a retired hospital matron. LAJ/ATM • NRS: E878/73, Child Assault Committee: transcripts of evidence given by witnesses, 1925. DWT (for Jean Thomson); Glasgow Herald, 10 Sept. 1915; Minutes of Evidence of the Committee on the Employment of Women on Police Duties, Parliamentary Papers, 1921, Cmd. 1133; The Scotsman, 10 Sept. 1915. MILLER, Lydia Mackenzie Falconer, n. Fraser [Mrs H. Myrtle], baptised Inverness 25 Jan. 1812, died

Lochinver 11 March 1876. Editor, writer. Daughter of Elizabeth Lydia Macleod, teacher, and William Fraser, small merchant. Lydia Fraser was educated at Inverness Royal Academy from 1820, and in the arts as a ‘lady boarder’ with George Thomson, Edinburgh (1827–8). From 1830, she ran a small school in Cromarty, and in 1837 married poet, stonemason and geologist Hugh Miller (1802–56). Lydia Miller bore five children and wrote children’s books about natural history and religion (using the pen name Mrs Harriet Myrtle). From 1840, she assisted Hugh Miller as editor of The Witness, which supported the Disruption. Theirs was an intellectual partnership: her novel Passages in the Life of an English Heiress (1847) argued the Free Church cause. After the devastating blow of her husband’s suicide in 1856, she sought to ensure his reputation. Despite poor health, she worked as his literary executor, publishing his manuscripts, revising works and collaborating with his biographer, Peter Bayne, producing ‘lucid and wellinformed editorial apparatuses’ (Shortland 1996, p. 47). Whether Hugh Miller’s suicide was at all related to marital stress is a matter of dispute. It has been argued variously that her ‘strong views on the intelligence and self-sufficiency of women . . . would certainly have played havoc with Miller’s sense of self ’ (ibid., p. 47); that she played the tragic heroine (Rosie 1981); and that she was intelligent, loyal, courageous and remarkable (Sutherland 2002). Lydia and Hugh Miller’s oldest surviving child was the writer Harriet Miller Davidson (born Cromarty 25 Nov. 1839, died Adelaide, South Australia, 21 Dec. 1883). Harriet Miller had a gift for improvisation in music and poetry. At Oliphant’s School, Edinburgh, she excelled at versifying, but left on her father’s death to care for her mother, returning to school in London (1857–9). She married Rev. John Davidson (1834/5–81), Free Church minister, in 1863, and bore five children. She published verse and two temperance novels before the family migrated to South Australia in 1870, where John Davidson was at Chalmers Church and later the University of Adelaide. Writing verse, fiction, children’s stories, essays and reviews while running a school, she commented that the mother and artist engages ‘in a vain struggle between her emotional and intellectual natures’ (1880, p. 617). Two serials, Man of Genius and Sir Gilbert’s Children, explored her family’s story: her father’s suicide ‘haunted her’ (obit., 1883). Her own

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daughter, Lydia Miller Middleton (1864–1934), writer, wrote, ‘She was really an Intellectual. The joy of her life lay in the use of her wits. She was a fine talker, of the Victorian era, when talking was a fine art’ (Private letter). ma • NLS: MSS relating to Lydia F. Miller, MS 7516, 5139, 7527, 7528; Acc. 10097, vol. I, no. 103; MSS relating to Harriet M. Davidson, MS 7528, 7516; [Williamson, H. M.] ‘Life of Hugh Miller’, unpub. MS (c. 1872), NLS, S 7527; Univ. of Adelaide, Barr Smith Library: Davidson papers. Miller, L., Work as above, and as Myrtle, Mrs H. (1845) A Story Book of the Seasons: Spring (and 16 other children’s books); (1902) ‘Mrs Hugh Miller’s Journal’, edited by her grand-daughter [Lydia Miller Mackay]; Chambers’s Journal, 6th Series, April–July 1902; Anon. [Lydia F. Miller] (1847) Passages in the Life of an English Heiress; Davidson, H. M. (1867) Isobel Jardine’s History, (1880) ‘Girls’, The Adelaide Observer, 10 April, p. 617 [and other writings]. Allen, M. (1999) ‘The author’s daughter, the professor’s wife, Harriet Miller Davidson’, Jour. Hist. Soc. South Australia, 27 (Bibl.); Bayne, P. (1871) The Life and Letters of Hugh Miller ; Calder, A. (1993) ‘The Disruption in fiction’, in S. J. Brown and M. Fry (eds) Scotland in the Age of Disruption; ODNB (2004); Rosie, G. (1981) Hugh Miller: outrage and order ; Shortland, M. (ed.) (1996) Hugh Miller and the Controversies of Victorian Science ; Sutherland, E. (2002) Lydia, Wife of Hugh Miller of Cromarty; The Adelaide Observer, 22 Dec. 1883 (obit.). MILLIGAN, Jean Callander, born Glasgow 9 July 1886, died Glasgow 28 July 1978. Advocate of traditional Scottish dance. Daughter of Isabella Aitchison, teacher, and Dr James Milligan, Rector, Glasgow High School for Girls. The fifth of six children, Jean Milligan was educated at her father’s school, then qualified in physical training at Kingsfield College, Dartford. Appointed to Dundas Vale Training College (later Jordanhill) in 1909, she immediately showed interest in traditional dance and music. After war service as a VAD in Malta, she became principal PT instructor at Jordanhill, and was influential in the national development of physical education in Scotland, until her retirement in 1948. In 1923, she met Ysobel Stewart of Fasnacloich (1882–1968), head of training for Girl Guides in Scotland, who was keen to promote Scottish country dancing among young people. With others, they convened a meeting in Glasgow in November 1923, forming the Scottish Country Dance Society. With Jean Milligan as inspirational principal teacher and technical adviser, the Society produced instruction books, devised a teacher-training programme,

and founded a St Andrews Summer School, held annually since 1927 (except in wartime) and now hosting some thousand dancers. Jean Milligan compiled the popular 101 Scottish Country Dances (1956, 1963) and a manual, Won’t You Join the Dance? (1982, rev. edn.). After 1945, she travelled to promote Scottish country dancing worldwide, encouraging new branches of the Society, and still dancing even after o­ perations on her knees. In 1973, she was voted Evening Times Scotswoman of the Year, and in 1977 the University of Aberdeen awarded her an LLD. She was ‘a woman with a vision and with the ability and tenacity to . . . make it become reality’ (the Earl of Mansfield in MacFadyen and Adams 1983, p. 7). By its 80th anniversary in 2003, the RSCDS had 166 branches and 448 affiliated groups in 41 countries. jth • Milligan, J. C., Works as above, and (1924) The Scottish Country Dance and other books. MacFadyen, A. and Adams, F. H. (1983) Dance with Your Soul; MacFadyen, A. (1988) An Album for Mrs Stewart. MILNE, Lennox Carruthers, OBE, m. McLaren, born Edinburgh 9 May 1909, died Haddington 23 June 1980. Actor. Daughter of Jessie Josephine Thomson, and Robert Rose Milne, stockbroker’s cashier. Growing up in Portobello, Lennox Milne trained for the stage at Edinburgh College of Drama and RADA. After graduation, she worked for a short time as a producer of schools programmes for the BBC but was soon offered work by the various repertory companies that were becoming established in Scotland. She appeared in all Tyrone Guthrie’s productions of The Thrie Estaitis at the Edinburgh International Festival and in many plays by Robert McLellan. She gave distinguished performances on radio and television and, at the Gateway Theatre during the 1953 Edinburgh festival, she gave her first performance in The Heart is Highland, a solo play written for her by Robert Kemp. It gained her the first drama award to be given by the SAC (1954), was seen throughout Scotland and later had a s­ uccessful North American tour. In 1968, she played the headmistress in the Broadway production of The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (see Kay, Christina; Spark, Muriel), repeating her performance at the Royal Lyceum Theatre, Edinburgh, later that year. Always an active, practical woman, Lennox Milne was one of the co-founders of the Edinburgh

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Gateway Company in 1953 (with Tom Fleming and Robert Kemp) and for the next 12 years, in her work as actor, director and administrator, the theatre in Leith Walk became pivotal in all her activities. In its first season, she took part in the play One Traveller Returns and shortly afterwards married the author, Moray McLaren. Appointed a member of the SAC in 1965, she was also one of the first directors of Radio Forth. After her husband’s death in 1972, she moved to Haddington where, in her final years, she devoted much energy to the Lamp of Lothian Charitable Trust. dc • Campbell, D. (1996) Playing for Scotland; Edinburgh Gateway Company (1965) Six Seasons of the Edinburgh Gateway.

n. McKenzie Campbell, born Leith 17 June 1910, died California, USA, 9 August, 1991. Restaurant worker and emigrant. Daughter of Mary Jane Gill, m. McKenzie, domestic worker, and Daniel Campbell, iron worker and commercial traveller. At the time of her birth, Mary McKenzie Campbell’s parents were not married to each other but to different spouses, with whom they both had children. They left their spouses and moved in together in 1914, taking Mary and her younger sister Peggy with them but leaving the four McKenzie children and seven Campbell children with the other parents. They then had another child, Colin. Faced with another pregnancy in 1917 and living in poor accommodation with very limited means, her mother had an abortion, illegal at that time, and died as a result. Daniel Campbell died seven years later of tuberculosis. Orphaned at age 14, Mary left school to become a waitress at Fairley’s dancehall and café in Edinburgh, living in lodgings. In 1930, she ­emigrated alone, in steerage, to the USA. She found work as a waitress in New York, Connecticut and Florida before marrying John Daniel Miner (1917–92), a merchant seaman, in 1941. They had three children. The family moved twice then settled in northern California in 1961. After some time spent caring for her invalid mother-in-law and the children, Mary Miner returned to restaurant jobs. Her husband left the family in 1966, moving out of state to avoid paying alimony and child support. Mary Miner continued working until she was 77 years old, when the all-night café in which she was employed was closed down.

MINER, Mary Gill (Mae, Pat),

Most of her 13 siblings, like many other Scots of the time, also left Scotland, for Canada, India, England, New Zealand, Australia and the USA. In her life she faced considerable hardship, but was known for her resilient spirit, hard work, strong faith and wry wit. Among her favourite sayings was, ‘There’s never a bad that couldn’t be worse’. vm • Miner, V. (2001) The Low Road: a Scottish family memoir. Personal information, Valerie Miner (daughter). MITCHEL (or MITCHELSON), Margaret,

fl. 1638. Prophetess. Possibly daughter of James Mitchelson, minister of Yester. Margaret Mitchel rose briefly to fame around the time of the 1638 Glasgow General Assembly, when she predicted the success of the National Covenant. She was close to the minister Henry Rollock who was spellbound by her. Archibald Johnston of Wariston heard of her from Rollock on 13 September 1638: the final notice in his diary is on 22 January 1639. He wrote that she ‘was transported in heavinly raptures and spak strainge things for the happy succes of Gods cause and Chryst croune in this kingdome’ (Johnston 1911, p. 393). Some noblemen found Christian conviction in listening to her, though she was noted disparagingly in James Gordon’s Scots Affairs and in the Large Declaration which stated that she was a minister’s daughter and that ‘she hath been for many yeeres distracted by fits’ (Large Declaration, p. 227). She was, however, the object of an ‘incredible concourse’ (ibid., p. 227) in Edinburgh. In 2014, one speech was discovered in a 17th-century manuscript. dm

• National Library of New Zealand, Wellington, NZ: Turnbull MSY 6821 Gordon, J. (1841) History of Scots Affairs, from 1637 to 1641, 3 vols, J. Robertson and G. Grub, eds; Johnston of Wariston, A., (1911) Diary 1632–1639, G. M. Paul, ed.; A Large Declaration concerning the late tumults in Scotland (1639) pp. 226–8; ODNB (2004) (see Mitchelson, Margaret). MITCHELL, Elizabeth Buchanan, born Edinburgh 21 July 1880, died Stirling 21 July 1980. Town planner and housing campaigner. Daughter of Jane F. Mirlees, and Andrew Mitchell, advocate. Born into a well-to-do family, Elizabeth Mitchell attended St George’s School for girls and graduated from Oxford University with a double first in classics. During her final year, she lodged with Mrs Arnold Toynbee, thus becoming involved with the women’s settlement movement in London, and later the Garden Cities’ Association. In 1913 she travelled to Saskatchewan and stayed for a year,

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observing the lives of pioneers in newly built communities. This period had a formative effect on her convictions about town planning, expressed in her account of her experiences (1915). Returning to her father’s Biggar estate during the Second World War, she volunteered for the campaign for food production, taking particular interest in women’s agricultural labour, and later claiming that her Canadian experience helped encourage formation of the SWRI (1967, pp. 11–12). Elizabeth Mitchell sat on Lanark’s education authority (1919–29), and Biggar town council (1935–53). She was also a JP and parliamentary Liberal Party candidate (1923 and 1929), but is chiefly remembered for her involvement with the Town and Country Planning Association (TCPA). As an active member, contributor to its journal, and sometime chair of its Scottish branch, she campaigned vigorously for the cause of new towns during the 1940s. She sat on East Kilbride planning committee and received the TCPA’s Ebenezer Howard medal in 1955. After retirement, she published a memoir (1967), and lived to be 100. Her views on housing and welfare issues are still regularly cited in literature on post-war housing. LF • Mitchell, E. B. (1915, reprinted 1981, foreword by S. Jackel) In Western Canada Before the War: a study of communities; Mitchell, E. B. (1967) The Plan That Pleased. Lindsay, J. (1993) Elizabeth B. Mitchell: the happy town planner; The Times, 22 July 1980 (obit/).

born Leith 24 March 1884, died Edinburgh 24 Sept. 1940. Suffragette campaigner. Daughter of Annie Alexander, and Alexander Mitchell, timber merchant. Lillias Mitchell joined the WSPU in 1907/ early 1908 after attending, with her mother, a suffrage meeting in Edinburgh at which Emmeline Pankhurst spoke; she later recalled ‘I shall never forget the blazing warmth of that meeting’ (AGC, p. 73). Of the following years she wrote, ‘I lived and moved and seemed to have my being in working for votes for women’ (ibid.). Imprisoned in Holloway for two weeks in 1910, by 1911 she was WSPU organiser in Aberdeen. In March 1912, after a window-smashing raid in London, she was sentenced to four months’ imprisonment and went on hunger strike. When released, she continued to lead militant protest from Aberdeen, painting the marker flags on Balmoral golf course in WSPU colours and confronting the Prime Minister, H. H. Asquith, on the Dornoch golf course. Taking over the campaign in the English midlands,

MITCHELL, Lillias Tait,

with Mary Richardson she planted a bomb in a Birmingham railway station, and helped attack the Castle Bromwich racecourse. When arrested, she again went on hunger strike at Winson Green Prison, Birmingham, in May 1914. Loyal to the Pankhursts, she was ‘a model WSPU organiser’ (ibid., p. 117). After the war she joined the EWCA, wrote for The Scotsman and was secretary to the Edinburgh and South Area of the YWCA. jr • AGC; SS; WSM.

n. Haldane, CBE, born Edinburgh 1 Nov. 1897, died Carradale 11 Jan. 1999. Author, political activist and councillor. Daughter of Louisa Kathleen Trotter, and John Scott Haldane, physiologist. Naomi Haldane and her elder brother Jack grew up in Oxford, although summer visits to the Haldane family estate at Cloan, Perthshire, were a vital part of their childhood. She was educated at the Dragon School, Oxford, and began a degree course in science at the Society of Home Students (later St Anne’s College), Oxford. She married Gilbert Richard (Dick) Mitchison (1890–1970) in 1916, and had seven children, two of whom died young, and, eventually, 19 grandchildren. She was born into upper-middle-class privilege but created a life for herself that was experimental and adventurous. As a young married woman with a husband at the Front, she worked as a VAD nurse in London in 1915. Her first novel, The Conquerors, was published in 1923. She was an active socialist and stood unsuccessfully for parliament for the Scottish Universities in 1935. In 1932, she travelled to Russia with the Fabian Society, a trip that also allowed her to visit the scenes of her recently published novel, The Corn King and the Spring Queen. Although her early fiction was set in the Classical world, it clearly embodies both the richness of her own life and the political issues of her time. It also reflects the Mitchisons’ openness about relationships. In 1937, the Mitchison family moved to Carradale on the Mull of Kintyre, where she involved herself with Highland affairs. Throughout the Second World War she kept a diary for the Mass-Observation archive, detailing life in Carradale. She ran the home farm, gardening, farming and fishing. She wrote and produced plays locally, and also wrote her monumental Scottish novel The Bull Calves (1947), drawing on her Scottish ancestry and her concerns about gender and nation. She was a long-standing member of Argyll County Council (1945–65), a member of

MITCHISON, Naomi Mary Margaret,

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the Highland Panel (1947–65) and served on the Highlands and Islands Advisory Council (1966–75). In 1960, a meeting with Linchwe, chief of the Bakgatla, led to her involvement with the Bakgatla people in Botswana. She was recognised as tribal adviser and Mmarona (mother) to the Bakgatla in 1963. For 25 years she visited Botswana regularly and her African experiences shaped her writing. She wrote more than 70 books, published between 1923 and 1991, including, as well as her major achievement in historical fiction, children’s books, three books of poetry, several plays, collections of short stories and social and political non-fiction. In 1962, she moved into science fiction with Memoirs of a Spacewoman. Her last book, Sea Green Ribbons, was published in 1991. In her later years she divided her time between Carradale and London. Her writing expresses her passionate concern for justice and social equality; Neil Ascherson commented in her obituary, ‘If intelligent people shouted long and loud enough at governments, she believed, truth would prevail’ (Guardian 1999). Her novels are about individuals with lives that are personally both difficult and rewarding, but who have in common a social role and a social conscience. Like Naomi Mitchison, Kirstie in The Bull Calves and Erif Der in The Corn King and the Spring Queen are undefeated women who retain their sense of adventure and their belief that kindness and truth should, and will, prevail, in the face of all difficulty and disillusionment. me • The Mitchell Library, Glasgow: Archives and Special Collections, Misc corr. and MSS; NLS: Acc. 4549, 5912, 7721, 8503, 9186, corr. and literary MSS; NRA: see website for other archive sources, www.nra.nationalarchives.gov.uk Mitchison, N., Works as above and see Bibls. below; (2008) ‘Naomi Mitchison’, Essays and Journalism, vol. 2: Carradale, M. Burgess (ed.). ECSWW, Calder, J. (1997) The Nine Lives of Naomi Mitchison (Bibl.); HSWW (Bibl.); ODNB (2004) (also lists archive sources); The Guardian, 17 Jan. 1999 (obit.). MITCHISON, Rosalind Mary (Rowy), FRSE, n. Wrong, born Manchester 11 April 1919, died Edinburgh 20 Sept. 2002. Historian, teacher. Daughter of Rosalind Grace Smith, and Edward Murray Wrong, mathematician. Rosalind Wrong, grand-daughter of Canadian historian George Wrong, was educated in Oxford and London. She took a double first in mathematics and modern history at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford, in 1942. In 1947, with her marriage to Murdoch Mitchison, who became Professor of

Zoology at the University of Edinburgh, she joined and contributed to the Haldane-Mitchison network (which included *Naomi Mitchison), so active in British scientific and literary life and the intellectual and political life of the labour ­movement. Between 1947 and 1967 she combined raising four children with several different university teaching posts. At the University of Edinburgh she was lecturer, then reader, in economic history and gained a personal chair in social history in 1981. An inspiring teacher, she combined modern social history with an insistence on archive research and narrative. She was active in many historical societies including the Scottish History Society (serving as President), and the Social Science Research Council, as well as providing leadership for the East Lothian Historical Association. Rowy Mitchison made a major contribution to Scotland’s historical literature, notably in the widely read History of Scotland (1970), her studies on the Poor Law, and joint research with *Leah Leneman on early modern illegitimacy, including Sexuality and Social Control (1989). She was made FRHistS and FRSE. Her publications were an innovatory part of the renaissance of Scottish historical writing since 1960. rjm • Mitchison, R., Works as above, and (1962) Agricultural Sir John, (1980) (ed.) The Roots of Nationalism, (1991) Why Scottish History Matters, (2000) The Old Poor Law in Scotland, 1574–1845. Fraser, W. H. (2003) ‘Rosalind Mitchison (1919–2002) and John Butt (1929–2002): an appreciation’, Scot. Econ. and Soc. Hist., 23/1; Leneman, L. (ed.) (1988) Perspectives in Scottish Social History (Bibl. to 1988); The Guardian, 4 Oct. 2002 (obit.); Mitchison, J. Murdoch (2005) ROWY: Rosalind Mitchison: a memoir. Private information.

n. Hectorson, born Unst 1825, died Baltasound 2 July 1894. Awarded medals for bravery by RNLI and RHSoc. Daughter of Williamina Anderson and Laurence Hectorson. May Hectorson, one of six children, was orphaned by her father’s death by drowning in 1826. Fostered out to the island of Yell, she married David Moar, a fisherman, in 1847. On 9 September 1858 she was out in the fields when she and two other women saw a four-oared sail-boat capsize in a gale and the upturned vessel drift towards rocks with the four men clinging to the hull. Oral accounts tell of her fashioning a rope from a cow’s tethers and attaching a buoy. ‘“If some o’ you will guide weel this rope” . . . dashing from her face her woman’s tears, “I’ll gang ower the banks and save the men, wi’ God’s

MOAR, May (Marjory),

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help”’ (Saxby 1892, p.11). She was lowered down the cliff to a ledge; two men caught the line she threw and came ashore, the other two clung to the wreckage and drifted to shelter. The local minister sent accounts of the rescue to the RNLI and the Royal Humane Society and May Moar was awarded the medals in recognition of her bravery. In 1867, she and her family were evicted from their home during the Yell clearances and in 1881 her husband was drowned during the Gloup fishing disaster of 20 July when 58 men were lost. May returned to her home island of Unst. Her bravery was the subject of the short story Daughter of Sea Kings by Shetland writer *Jessie Saxby. Her RNLI medal was discovered in a dyke at Unst and is now in the Shetland Museum. Grace Petrie (1819–1917) was also recognised for bravery by the Royal Humane Society following her rescue, along with her sister-in-law Helen Petrie, of two men from a sinking boat in 1856. They are also said to have rescued a father and son in similar circumstances in 1859. lca

notably the collaborations Stone, and Pictures and Poems. She also published books on Orkney, Shetland and the Faroe Islands with Norwegian travel writer Liv Kjørsvik Schei and was commissioned to make a series of photographs for the opening of the Scottish Parliament building in 2004. In her later years, she turned to painting and gardening, establishing an unlikely oasis in the challenging climate of a sea-facing home on the outskirts of Stromness. She was much appreciated in Orkney, where people gravitated towards what Mackay Brown called ‘the brightness of her nature’ (Scotsman 2007). RLM • Gunnie Moberg Archive, Kirkwall. Moberg, G. (1979) Stone Built; (2006) Orkney; Kjørsvik Schei, L. and Moberg, G. (1985) The Orkney Story; (1988) The Shetland Story; (1991) The Faroe Islands; Mackay Brown, G. and Moberg, G. (1987) Stone, (1996) Orkney Pictures and Poems. The Independent, 5 Nov. 2007 (obit.); Mackie, D. and Marr, R. (2016) A Swedish Orcadian, Gunnie Moberg, Images from Published Works; The Scotsman, 8 Nov. 2007 (obit.).

• ‘Museum Corner’, New Shetlander, 196, Summer, 1996, pp. 10–11; Robertson, M. S. (1991) Sons and Daughters of Shetland 1800–1900; Saxby, J. M. E. (1892) Heim-Laund and Heim-Folk. MOBERG, Gun Margoth (Gunnie),‡ m. MacPhail,

born Gothenburg, Sweden 8 May 1941, died Stromness, Orkney 31 Oct. 2007. Artist, photo­ grapher. Daughter of Margot Lundblad, amateur painter, and Åke Moberg, accountant. Gunnie Moberg left school at 16 to work in a photographer’s studio. She arrived in Edinburgh in 1958, to work as an au pair, returning to study pottery at ECA. There she met American sculptor Tam (Campbell) MacPhail. The couple had four sons, and moved to a remote part of Argyll, their subsistence life funded partly by her batik designs. Gunnie Moberg had visited Orkney in 1975, and the family moved there the following year, her husband later running the well-known Stromness bookshop. Photography became her main artistic expression and she published Stone Built, a collection of aerial photographs, in 1979. Her arrival coincided with a cultural revival: the establishment of the St Magnus Festival and the Pier Arts Centre. She documented the artists and writers living in and visiting Orkney, becoming photographer in residence to the St Magnus Festival for three decades. Her friendship with poet George Mackay Brown bore fruit in several volumes,

MOFFAT, Maggie Liddell, n. Linck, born Spittal, Northumberland, 7 Jan. 1873, died Capetown, South Africa, Feb. 1943. Actress and suffragette. Daughter of Margaret Liddell Dowie, and Gottlob Frederick William Linck, seaman. Maggie Linck was the sixth of seven children. Most of her siblings had been born in Glasgow, and the family returned there shortly before the father died in 1878. The Lincks were musical, and she herself sang. She worked as a drapery saleswoman for some years however, before embarking on an acting career. She met photographer, actor and playwright Graham Moffat (1866–1951) when auditioning for his troupe, the Glasgow Junior Dramatic Club, and they married in 1897. They had one daughter, Winifred, who later worked in their company ‘Mr and Mrs Graham Moffat and their company of Scottish players’. Maggie Moffat’s interest in the WSPU was sparked when her husband overheard a man say: ‘Would we be discussing women’s claims now, if these women had not behaved outrageously?’ (Moffat 1955, p. 51). She joined the WSPU in 1907 and was arrested during a deputation to the House of Commons. Sent to Holloway for two weeks, she was one of the first two Scottish women to be imprisoned for the cause; the other was actress Annie Fraser, younger sister of *Helen Fraser. After his wife’s imprisonment,

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Graham Moffat formed the Glasgow Men’s League for Women’s Suffrage, for ‘the husbands and brothers of active suffragettes and other male sympathisers’, who often received ‘cruel comments’ (Moffat 1955, p. 52; HHGW, p. 105). When the WSPU split in October 1907, Maggie Moffat moved to the WFL, following the lead of *Teresa Billington-Greig, and became treasurer of its Scottish council. Graham Moffat wrote several plays, including the hugely successful Bunty Pulls the Strings, a ­‘sabbatarian comedy’, which opened at the Haymarket (11 July 1911) and changed their lives; after 617 performances, it transferred to Broadway in 1912 and toured the English-speaking world. Theatre work left the Moffats little time to devote to the suffrage cause, but they always made ‘their views clear when interviewed in the Press’ (AGC, p. 266). Maggie and Graham Moffat retired to South Africa in 1936. kbb • AGC; Campbell, D. (1996) Playing for Scotland; HHGW; Moffat, G. (1955) Join Me in Remembering. MONCRIEFF, (Marianne) Isobel, n. Dunlop, born

Glasgow 21 Dec. 1874, died Edinburgh 28 Sept. 1961. Glass designer and entrepreneur. Daughter of Margaret Waters Ure, and Matthew Dunlop. John Moncrieff Ltd was established as The North British Glassworks in Perth in the 19th century. Isobel Dunlop, who in 1897 married John Moncrieff Jnr, had a remarkable sense of design, which radically altered the company’s production. When cheap foreign competition reduced demand after 1918, the firm decided to concentrate on domestic fine glass production. Isobel Moncrieff took charge as artistic director, introducing an art-based style made by a Spanish family of skilled artisans, the Ysarts, and innovative production methods; she created a patternbook for the glass blowers. The product, ‘Monart Ware’, became world-famous. Launched in 1924 at the British Industries Fair, a year before the Arts Deco Paris Exhibition, it was similar in style, while Monart’s Scottish identity was advertised with a Scottish thistle. Early bowls and vases were followed by lamps and lampshades in simple round shapes, often using a feather motif. Isobel Moncrieff forged a link with Liberty’s fabrics, matching glass with their shades, and deriving most of the colour sources from the continent. ‘Gold-dust’, ‘silverdust’ and a dark rich red were popular at first, but changing taste later inspired a palette of pastel hues (Vaughan 1994, pp. 73, 75). Fashionable Monart

glassware was exported worldwide and is now seen as collectable. LS • Blench, B. J. R. (1983) ‘Scottish glass: 1945 to the present day’, Jour. Glass Studies, 25, pp. 207–11; Fleming, A. (1938, repr. 1977) Scottish and Jacobite Glass; Vaughan, M. T. (1994) ‘Scottish art glass: Marianne Isobel Moncrieff (1874–1961)’[containing biographical details], in J. Seddon and S. Worden (eds) Women Designing. MONTGOMERIE, Margaret see BOSWELL, Margaret

(1738 –1789)

MONTGOMERIE, Norah Mary, n. Shargool, born West Dulwich 6 April 1909, died Edinburgh 19 Feb. 1998. Folklorist and artist. Daughter of Letitia Collins, tailoress, and John Shargool, accountant. Born into a musical family, Norah Shargool was educated at a convent boarding school in Folkstone. She worked in London as a freelance magazine illustrator to finance art school. Influenced by her great-grandmother, Clara Saunders Lewis, who had sung Scottish folk songs to her as a child, she moved to Dundee to become an illustrator with D. C. Thomson. In 1934, she married poet, teacher and folklorist William Montgomerie, who shared her lifelong commitment to collecting and preserving Scottish traditional culture. In the mid-1940s, when William Montgomerie began to record Scots ballads, Norah collected street songs, rhymes, sayings, games and riddles. Together they produced a remarkable collection which she illustrated. When Scottish publishers showed no interest, Norah Montgomerie sent the manuscript to poet laureate Walter de la Mare, whose delight ensured publication of Sandy Candy and other Scottish Nursery Rhymes (1948). Thus began a series of child lore books, the product of ground-breaking work which pre-dates that of the internationally known Opies by at least 15 years. With no provision for the Scots language in the school curriculum, the Montgomeries assiduously promoted its use through such books as The Well at the World’s End (1956) and A Book of Scottish Nursery Rhymes (1965). Their anthologies aimed to attune the young to the pleasure of Scots language and poetry in general, so that in adulthood they might appreciate the richness of traditional balladry. Norah Montgomerie also wrote her own books, many with her colour illustrations. As a mother of two children herself, she enthusiastically encouraged and gave confidence to many who, influenced by teachers and parents who

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sought to eliminate Scots dialects, had lost their native speech. Her passionate commitment, creativity and work (largely funded from the family purse) were lifelong and continue to bear fruit. m gt b • Montgomerie, N., Works as above and (1961) Twenty-Five Fables, (1962) To Read and to Tell, (1964) The Merry Little Fox and other Animal Stories; (1959) with K. Lines, Poems and Pictures. Private information: Dian Montgomerie Elvin. MONTGOMERIE, Susanna, Countess of Eglinton, n. Kennedy, born 1689/90, died Auchans House,

Dundonald, 18 Mar. 1780. Hostess, literary patron and estate manager. Daughter of Elizabeth Leslie, and Sir Archibald Kennedy of Culzean. Introduced young into Edinburgh society, the beautiful Susanna Kennedy became, in 1709, the third wife of Alexander Montgomerie, 9th Earl of Eglinton (c. 1660–1729). They had three sons and eight daughters. In Eglinton Castle, Ayrshire, and Edinburgh, Susanna Montgomerie was renowned for her lavish hospitality and as a literary patron. The poet Allan Ramsay, dedicating The Gentle Shepherd (1725) to her, wrote of her ‘penetration, superior wit, and sound judgment’ (Burns and Oliver, vol. 2, p. 205) and William Hamilton of Bangour of her inspiration to pastoral poetry. When widowed, she became, with Lord Milton, joint guardian to her children. Her witty, reflective, and intimate letters to Milton, sharing both the children’s education and the management of the estate, reveal her extensive responsibilities. In 1732 she founded a brewery in Ayr. She maintained active supervision of the estate collieries, intervening in a labour dispute there in 1749. On her son’s succession she moved to Kilmaurs and after 1765 to Auchans House. His sudden death in 1769, by murder or manslaughter, was a major blow; but when James Boswell and Dr Johnson called in 1773, they found ‘her figure . . . majestic, her manners high-bred, her reading extensive and her conversation elegant’ (Boswell 1963, p. 368). JR • NRS: GD 3/5/1007-1121, 24/1/386/5, 25/8/1060. Boswell, J. (Pottle, F. A. and Bennett, C. H. (eds) (1963) Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides with Samuel Johnson, LLD, 1773; Burns, M. and Oliver, J. W. (1953) (eds) The Works of Allan Ramsay, 6 vols; Duckham, B. (1970) A History of the Scottish Coal Industry, Vol. I, 1700–1815; Fraser, W. (1859) Memorials of the Montgomeries, Earls of Eglinton, 2 vols; ODNB (2004); Robertson, W. (1908) Ayrshire. Its History and Historic Families, 2 vols.

MONTROSE, Violet, Duchess of see GRAHAM, Violet, Duchess of Montrose (1854–1940) MOON, Lorna

(1886–1930)

see LOW, Helen Nora Wilson

MOORE (or MUIR), Jane (Jean), n. Watson/NicWalter, born Cardross

c. 1635, died London 1695. Tobacconist, philanthropist. Jane, sometimes Jean, Watson was said by local tradition to have been of humble birth and to have been employed initially as a domestic servant. Following a minor theft from her employer she fled Cardross, found her way to Leith, married a man by the name of Moore or Muir and with him travelled to London. Following her husband’s death in London, she ran a successful tobacconist’s business in Wapping. Her interesting will, proved in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury in 1695, reveals her considerable wealth, including her ‘Negro servants’, and that she moved within a circle of expatriate Scots. Moore’s Bridge, which carries the busy A814 road across the Auchinfroe Burn in the village of Cardross, is a permanent memorial to her. Although now largely a Victorian reconstruction, the bridge still bears the date 1688, the year in which she funded its construction. She also gave a bell to the parish kirk, with two fine mortcloths. Her greatest act of charity, however, was her bequest of £500 sterling for the poor of Cardross. Known as ‘Mrs Moore’s Mortification’, the bequest is still available for community causes in the village, more than three centuries after her death. mm

• NA: PROB 11/429/569: Will of Jane Moore, 31 Dec. 1695. MacLeod, D. (1891) Historic Families, Notable Families and Memorabilia of the Lennox ; Maughan, W. C. (1897) Annals of Garelochside.

born Maidstone, Kent, 28 August 1869, died Dublin 4 March 1955. Artist, suffragette and editor. Daughter of Margaret Humphreys, and George Moorhead, army surgeon. The third of six children in an Irish Roman Catholic family, Ethel Moorhead was convent educated. Her sister Alice Moorhead (see Thomson, Emily) and three brothers became doctors, two in the army. The family lived in India, Mauritius and South Africa, until the parents settled in Dundee in 1900. Alice Moorhead paid for her sister to train as an artist in Whistler’s studio, Atelier Carmen, in Paris, some time between 1898 and 1901. Ethel Moorhead returned home to look after her parents

MOORHEAD, Ethel Agnes Mary,

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until they died. She had a studio in Dundee, and first exhibited there in 1901; her paintings were considered ‘the gems of the collection’ (Advertiser 1901). From then until 1918 she exhibited at Glasgow Institute of Fine Arts, the RSA, Walker Gallery, Liverpool, and New England Art Club, as well as in London and Dublin. She painted mostly portraits, but also landscapes of the Irish countryside. Her early work was conventional but she later painted what she called ‘daubs’ in Fauvist style. When her father died in 1911, Ethel Moorhead joined the WSPU. Using a string of aliases she smashed windows in London and a showcase at the Wallace Monument in Stirling; threw an egg at Churchill and pepper at the police; attacked a teacher with a dog whip; wrecked police cells, and was involved in several arson attempts. The ‘most turbulent’ of suffragettes (AGC, p. 266), she achieved notoriety in the Scottish press but held no formal post in the WSPU, acting on her own initiative. She defended militancy in the local press: ‘We, indeed, owe it to the women who had reasoned for 40 years and done nothing that we have got nothing. How beggarly appear arguments before a defiant deed’ (Advertiser 1912). Never one to suffer injustice quietly, she refused to recognise the jurisdiction of the courts, and complained so vehemently about treatment that the Secretary of State had to answer a question in parliament. She was imprisoned several times. Following her arrest with *Dorothea Chalmers Smith in July 1913 for attempted arson, she became the first Scottish suffragette to be force-fed – the focus of considerable protest. Released under the ‘Cat and Mouse Act’, an experience she describes in ‘Incendiaries’ (1925), she was held responsible by the police for four further fires. She was caught and imprisoned again and once more went on hunger strike, adding thirst and sleep strikes. She was near to death before she was released. It is virtually certain she was the woman who escaped when her close friend Frances (Fanny) Mary Parker (1875–1924) was arrested in July 1914 attempting to set fire to Burns’s cottage. Fanny Parker was born in New Zealand, a niece of Lord Kitchener. She was a WSPU organiser in Dundee (1912) and Edinburgh (1913). She also spoke for and organised tours for the Scottish University Women’s Suffrage Union. She was imprisoned five times and force-fed three times (see Cadell, Grace). Ethel Moorhead and Fanny Parker worked together for the WFL National Service organisation during the First World War, campaigning for women war workers

to be properly paid. Later, Fanny Parker was Deputy Controller of the WAAC in Boulogne. In 1922, Ethel Moorhead met a young poet called Ernest Walsh in Claridges. He became her protégé, and together they travelled round Europe. When Fanny Parker died in 1924, Ethel Moorhead used her legacy to start a quarterly arts journal with Ernest Walsh. This Quarter published writing by Gertrude Stein, Ezra Pound, Ernest Hemingway and James Joyce, and art by Brancusi and Picabia, as well as work by Ethel Moorhead and Ernest Walsh. After Walsh died in 1926, she edited the third and fourth editions. During these years it was said in the family that she had various affairs with Bohemians of the time, but no details are known. Although the family had been wealthy, she was left nothing by her parents, and it seems likely that she lived mainly on money from her brothers. In later life, she was supported financially by her niece. It seems her latter years were unhappy. She died in a nursing home in Dublin. imh • Dundee Local Studies Library: newspapers including Celtic Journal, Piper o’ Dundee, Wizard of the North. Moorhead, E. (1925) ‘Incendiaries’, This Quarter, 2. AGC; Dundee Advertiser, 17 April 1901, 11 March 1912; DWT; Leneman, L. (1993) Martyrs in our Midst ; McAlmon, R. and Boyle, K. (1966) Being Geniuses Together, 1920–30; ODNB (2004); WSM. Private information. MORICE, Margaret, n. Kennedy (or Kennerty), baptised Aberdeen 1710, died Aberdeen 1800. Baker. Like many tradeswomen, Margaret Kennedy Morice shared her husband John Morice’s (1705–70) business for thirty-six years, and ran it as a widow for thirty years from 1770. She owned the family tenement, located centrally on Castle Street, Aberdeen. As ‘Margaret Morice and Co.’ she took apprentices between 1768 and 1794, when she reverted to her family name of Kennedy, making her last entry in 1796. She purposefully kept the name Morice, to retain the prestige and commercial identity developed when the partnership built up a substantial and respected business. Between 1739 and 1750, she bore seven children; only Barbara survived her, and none joined the business. The couple provided opportunities for their children: the eldest, David, became an advocate, and Barbara married well. She trained apprentices from good families, collecting premiums that matched those of male bakers. Hers was a well-run and wellregarded business, and she took care to preserve her interests with a notice in the Aberdeen Journal

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in 1789 protecting her from a partner’s and David’s bankruptcies. DLS • Simonton, D. (2017) ‘“All the days of their lives”: the lifecycle of a family business’ in J. Heinonen and K. VainioKorhonen (eds) Women in Business Families: from past to present.

born London 10 March 1891, died Glasgow 29 Feb. 1980. Dancer, educator, founder of the Margaret Morris Movement (MMM). Daughter of Victoria Maundrell, acting teacher, and William Bright Morris, artist. Margaret Morris was brought up in France until she was 5 years old. She had no formal education but was bilingual and gained an appreciation of the arts from her parents’ circle. She began performing in public, aged 3, reciting French verse, then spent three years with Ben Greet’s Shakespeare Company as a child actor, taking lessons with John d’Auban, ballet master at Drury Lane Theatre. She joined Frank Benson’s company as an ingénue but soon returned to dancing. She adapted the six Greek positions (learned from Raymond Duncan, brother of Isadora), incorporating her own exercises and some modified balletic positions, to create a system of free movement that became the basis of her future work. John Galsworthy, with whom she had a brief affair, and his wife, Ada, helped establish Margaret Morris’s first dance school, in 1910. In 1913 she took a dance troupe to the Marigny Theatre in Paris where she visited the Scottish artist John Duncan Fergusson (1874–1961). His enthusiasm for Diaghilev’s Russian Ballet and for Indian and Cambodian art influenced the choreography and costuming of her dances. Moving to London at the outbreak of the First World War, they jointly founded the Margaret Morris Club, a centre for artists, writers, musicians and dancers. Their relationship became mutually inspirational. In the 1920s, Margaret Morris became increasingly interested in applying her system of movement to physical education, medicine and sport. After some initial resistance, her techniques became influential. She qualified as a physiotherapist in 1930 and worked with many international sportsmen and women, in tennis, golf, fencing and rugby. After her work at the Army Training School at Aldershot, she was encouraged to found a men’s training college, which under the auspices of the Basic Physical Training Association, was launched at Loughborough College in 1939.

MORRIS, Margaret Eleanor,

Seven ‘MMM’ schools were established, in England, Scotland and France, where she and J. D. Fergusson regularly spent summers. During the Second World War, all the schools closed except the one in Glasgow, where the couple settled. In 1940, she founded the Celtic Ballet Club, which gave monthly performances of her dances including The Forsaken Mermaid and The Skye Boat Song. In 1947, she formed a small professional company, Celtic Ballet of Scotland, which toured to France, Spain and the USA. Appearances at European festivals added to the company’s reputation, but her dream of creating a national Scottish dance company remained elusive. The Glasgow school closed in 1961, and after Fergusson’s sudden death that year, Margaret Morris devoted much of her time to writing and broadcasting. New MMM schools again flourished with her support, and at the time of her death in 1980, there were classes in the UK, Canada, USA, Switzerland, France, West Germany, the West Indies and South Africa. The annual international summer schools, which began in 1917, are still a focus for the movement. JBIM • Morris, M. (1925) Margaret Morris Dancing, (1928) The Notation of Movement, (1937) Basic Physical Training, (1943) ‘Celtic Ballet’, Dancing Times, 398, p. 89, (1954) ‘Celtic Ballet at Jacob’s Pillow’, Dance and Dancers, 15, 8, p. 29, (1955) ‘Celtic Ballet College’, Dancing Times, 542, p. 91, (1967) My Galsworthy Story, (1969) My Life in Movement, (1972) Creation in Dance and Life, (1974) The Art of J. D. Fergusson. Galsworthy, J. (1913) The Dark Flower; Goodwin, N. (1979) A Ballet for Scotland; Jeayes, I. (1960) ‘Margaret Morris Jubilee’, Dancing Times, 603, p. 173; Lawson, J. (1964) History of Ballet and its Makers; Margaret Morris Movement, film by Scottish Arts Council and Educational Films of Scotland, 1973; ODNB (2004); Trewhitt, B. and Hastie J. (c. 1985) Margaret Morris, 1891–1980; White, J. W. (1980) Margaret Morris. Private information: Jim Hastie, President and Artistic Director, MMM. MORRISON, Agnes Brysson Inglis (Nancy), [N. Brysson Morrison, Christine Strathern], born

Scotstownhill, near Glasgow, 24 Dec. 1903, died London 27 Feb. 1986. Novelist and biographer. Daughter of Agnes Brysson Inglis, charity fundraiser, and Arthur Mackie Morrison, ­engineer. One of six children, five of whom became published writers, Nancy (as she was known in the family) attended Park School in Glasgow and completed her education at Harvington College in London. Their mother, Agnes Brysson Morrison n. Inglis (1866–1934), originated the Flag Day 326

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movement in Glasgow in September 1914 and personally supervised 400 subsequent flag days throughout Britain, for which she was awarded the CBE in 1920. In their youth, Nancy and her elder sisters, Mary and Peggy, adopted the pen surname ‘Cost’; ‘Ann Cost’ was Nancy’s penname in the early 1920s. However, only Peggy Morrison (1897–1973) maintained the pseudonym throughout her life. Peggy studied at Glasgow School of Art and worked with Sir Frank Benson’s Company of Shakespearean Players. She published eighteen novels and a collection of short stories under the name ‘March Cost’. Mary Morrison also wrote short stories, which appeared in Argosy and Tatler under the pen name ‘M. N. Thomas’. Their brother Tommy Morrison wrote screenplays and novels as both T. J. Morrison and Alan Muir. Another brother, John Morrison, also wrote, including a history of Iona and the Iona Community of which he was a founder member. Nancy Brysson Morrison lived most of her life in Glasgow, sharing a home with Mary Morrison in Hillhead, but moved to London in later life. All her work was originally published under the authorship of N. Brysson Morrison, something she insisted on, possibly in the hope of receiving an unprejudiced reception. Some of her novels are set in Glasgow and Edinburgh, while others evoke the landscape and people of Perthshire and Aberdeenshire, where she spent many holidays. Her work has a preoccupation with the past, exemplified in The Winnowing Years (1949), for which she won the first Frederick Niven Award. It outlines three centuries of the history of the fictional parish of Drumban, based on factual details about the village of Carmunnock, near Glasgow, where her parents are buried. Between 1930 and 1974, she published ten novels, of which only The Gowk Storm (1933, 1988) and The Hidden Fairing (1951, 2009) have remained in print, five historical biographies, three religious texts and various short stories. Her historical novels question traditional approaches to historical narrative by highlighting earlier class, gender and ideological skewing. Focusing on those people previously omitted from conventional historical fiction (women, the poor, religious dissidents and social outcasts), her work offered a modern interpretation of Scotland’s past. She fictionalised the Highland Clearances when they were considered unsuitable material for such treatment, offered early psychological and feminist interpretations of history and explored the changing position of women in Scottish society. She also published more than

thirty romances under the pseudonym ‘Christine Strathern’. MS • NLS: MSS 27287–27373, 27400, 27403–4, 27410. Morrison, N. Brysson, Works as above. See also HSWW (Bibl.). Glasgow Herald, 2 August 1934 (obit.); HSWW (Bibl.); Hunter, S. (1953) ‘The Writing Morrisons’, The Scots Magazine, June; ODNB (2004); Seenan, M. (2000) ‘The watcher at the crossroads: ideological negotiations in the fiction of N. Brysson Morrison’, PhD Univ. of Glasgow, (2013) Nancy Brysson Morrison: a literary life; (2002) ‘The writing Morrisons’, The Scots Magazine, August; The Times, 27 March 1986 (obit.). MORRISON, Euphemia Flora Nicholson (Effie), born South Snizort, Skye, 28 Jan. 1917, died Glasgow 24 Sept. 1974. Secretary, broadcaster and occasional actor. Daughter of Annie Mackenzie, and Rev. Norman John Morrison, Free Church minister. During radio’s heydey in the 1940s and 1950s, Effie Morrison’s voice was one of the most familiar in Scotland. She was recruited by the Drama Department of the Scottish Home Service as one of a group of pioneer actors. However, she never gave up her day job as a secretary in a Glasgow office. Apart from performing in a wide range of radio drama, from Children’s Hour and schools broadcasting to Saturday Night Theatre, her scriptwriting and literary skills were demonstrated in her witty Kirsty Morag Letters. She scored her greatest success as an actress playing Chris Guthrie in Lewis Grassic Gibbons’s Sunset Song and Cloud Howe, transmitted in the early 1950s. Her theatrical roles were surprisingly few. With the Edinburgh Gateway Company, she played Mrs Noah in a cycle of Mystery plays entitled That Old Serpent (1961) and appeared at the 1961 Edinburgh Festival as Alison in Tom Fleming’s production of Robert Kemp’s Let Wives Tak Tent. She disliked appearing in front of an audience, feeling that this restricted her creativity; in a radio studio she felt free to be young or old, saint or sinner. It is perhaps ironic that she is often remembered today for her most famous television role, Mistress Niven in the original series of Doctor Finlay’s Casebook. dc

• Edinburgh Gateway Company (1965) Six Seasons of the Edinburgh Gateway.

born Levenwick, Shetland, 1825, died Dunrossness, Shetland, 6 Feb. 1918. Spinner and handknitter. Daughter of Margaret Harper, and Thomas Mouat, shoemaker and fisherman.

MOUAT, Elizabeth (Betty),‡

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Betty Mouat was a typical, and in most ways unremarkable, Shetland woman who became famous for her lone drift to Norway on the sailing vessel Columbine in January 1886, when she was 59 years old. Like many of her contemporaries in Shetland, where women significantly outnumbered men because of the high male mortality rate and long absences occasioned by the fishing industry, she never married. She lived with her half-brother, contributing to the household income by her fine knitting which she exchanged for goods in Lerwick’s stores. On a boat trip to Lerwick to sell shawls and to seek medical advice regarding a recent stroke, a heavy swell swept the skipper and his crew overboard, leaving her to drift alone. Sustained by one bottle of milk and two biscuits, she survived eight days and nine nights before the Columbine ran aground off the Norwegian coast, where she was attached to a rope and hauled ashore by local fishermen. The story soon reached the British and continental press and her own account of the voyage was printed in The Scotsman (24 February 1886); it said that ‘at no period of her trying experience does she seem to have given way to anything like violent grief, but rather . . . endured her dreadful trial . . . with remarkable calmness and resignation’. On her arrival in Edinburgh, hundreds queued to see her, and her return to Shetland was greeted by crowds on the dockside. Her fame ensured that her shawls were highly valued ­thereafter. Betty Mouat’s experience fascinated a nation unacquainted with the hard lives of Shetland women and her adventure was romanticised in prose and poetry, including the poem, ‘The Wreck of the Columbine’ by William McGonagall: ‘Oh! heaven, hard was the fate of this woman of sixty years of age/Tossing about on the briny deep, while the storm fiend did rage . . .’ She continued to receive visitors until her death at the age of 93. Her memorial is in the churchyard at Dunrossness and her former cottage in nearby Scatness is now a camping bothy. lca • Shetland Archives: D1/134, scrapbook cuttings. Grant, R. (1973) The Lone Voyage of Betty Mouat ; Manson, T. M. Y. (1996) Drifting Alone to Norway. MOXON, May

see DAVISON, Euphemia (1906–1996)

MUIR, Wilhelmina Johnston (Willa),‡ n. Anderson [Agnes Neill Scott], born Montrose 13 March 1890,

died Dunoon 22 May 1970. Writer and translator.

Daughter of Elizabeth Gray Anderson, dressmaker, and Peter Anderson, draper. Willa Anderson (then known as Minnie) had two brothers and attended Montrose Academy. After graduating first class in Classics at the University of St Andrews, 1910, she taught Latin and educational psychology in London. She met Orcadian poet Edwin Muir (1887–1959) in Glasgow in 1918 and they married the following year. They lived in London until 1921, in Prague, Germany, Italy, Montrose, and France from 1921 to 1926, then mainly in England from 1927 to 1935. Their son Gavin was born in 1927. To finance themselves, from 1925 to 1938 they taught, and translated from German and Czech, including Franz Kafka’s The Trial (1937). In Belonging (1968), Willa Muir’s memoir of her husband, she indicates that sometimes she did most of the translation, as the more fluent linguist, and at other times they shared the work. She also translated alone under the name ‘Agnes Neill Scott’. She published Women: An Inquiry, in 1925, exploring feminist ideas of the time, and the polemic Mrs Grundy in Scotland in 1936. She described her first novel, Imagined Corners (1931), as ‘Quite pre-Marxian! But a good picture of the world I grew up in’ (Journal 1948); it was reviewed as ‘a memorable contribution to the cartography of Scotland’ (Glasgow Herald 1931). Her second novel, the powerful Mrs Ritchie (1933), was darker and less autobiographical. She also wrote short pieces, radio talks, and two unpublished autobiographical novels, ‘Mrs Muttoe and the Top Storey’ (finished 1940) and ‘The Usurpers’ (1951–2). The Muirs lived in St Andrews and Edinburgh between 1935 and 1945; after the war they lived in Prague and Rome, at Newbattle Abbey, Dalkeith and spent a year at Harvard, USA. Because her parents were from Shetland, Willa Muir saw herself as a ‘displaced person’: ‘I grew up not fitting into Angus tradition and therefore critical, resentful, unsure. Hence my secret desire to own a house’ (Journal 1947–8). They bought their only house in Cambridgeshire in 1956. Edwin Muir died in 1959. Willa Muir’s last published works were Living with Ballads (1965) and Belonging. Displaced once more, she lived mainly in London from 1963, then in Dunoon from 1969. Willa Muir’s feminism and her intellectual interests are apparent in all her writing, published and private. Intellectual, passionate, insecure, inextricably connected with Edwin Muir during her life, she can now be assessed in her own right. Her novels, journals and letters illuminate an 328

MUNRO MUNRO, Anna Gillies Macdonald,‡ m. MunroAshman, born Glasgow 4 Oct. 1881, died Padworth,

i­ntellectual, European life as well as giving detailed and moving insight into growing up female in Scotland. abc • NLS: MSS 19670, 19674–19700, 19703, Willa Muir Letters (inc. Kathleen Raine, Tom Scott) and Verses; Univ. of St Andrews Library: MS 38466, Willa Muir Notebooks, Miscellaneous Papers (including ‘Mrs Muir’s Reminiscences’, 26 Feb. 1963), and Letters (inc. Anna Mill, Edwin Muir, A. S. Neill). Muir, W., Works as above, and see HSWW (Bibl.). Christianson, A. (2007) Moving in Circles: Willa Muir; ECSWW; Glasgow Herald, 2 July 1931 (Review of Imagined Corners), 23 May 1970 (obit.); *ODNB (2004). MUNRO, Ailie, n. Edmunds, born Swatow, South China, 24 August 1918, died London 9 May 2002. Teacher, author and folk music scholar. Daughter of Dorothy Paton and the Rev. Frederick Edmunds, teacher-missionaries. Ailie Edmunds’s family moved to Edinburgh when she was seven. An avid reader from an early age, she became fascinated with literature through hearing stories of Beowulf and Grendel from her primary school teacher, Miss Rivington. She trained as a music teacher and taught in Paisley, where she supplemented class singing sessions with recordings by the great traditional singers *Jeannie Robertson and Jimmy MacBeath. Her appreciation of music was eclectic, spanning classical, blues, jazz and the dustbowl ballads of American folksinger Woody Guthrie, which chimed with her strong socialist and feminist beliefs. In 1968, she joined the School of Scottish Studies in Edinburgh, where she worked in research, recording and lecturing on Scots song for 15 years. At the suggestion of composer Ronald Stevenson, she prepared the first commercially published study of Scottish folk music, The Folk Music Revival in Scotland (1984). Like other song collectors, she roamed the country seeking song variants and canvassing opinions, which she later collated. Alive to developments within traditional music, she updated the book in 1996. She was a consultant on the eight-volume Greig-Duncan Folk Song Collection and was proud to see its publication inspire the Edinburgh International Festival to take folksong out of the Fringe and grant it official status with a 21-concert series in 1995. rpa

• School of Scottish Studies Archives. Munro, A. Edmunds (1996) The Democratic Muse. The Herald, May 2002 (obit.); SSS Archive (2005) TOCHER, 58, pp. 50–6 (Appreciation). Private information.

near Reading 11 Sept. 1962. Suffragette, campaigner for women’s rights. Daughter of Margaret Ann MacVean, and Evan Macdonald Munro, schoolmaster. Anna Munro grew up in Edinburgh and campaigned for socialist James Connolly to be elected to Edinburgh Town Council in 1895, joining the Scottish Socialist Federation. Her lifelong socialism dated from her experience of ‘the extreme poverty, squalor and overcrowding in Edinburgh Cowgate’ (Autobiographical notes). Through the Wesleyan Methodist Sisters of the People (whom she admired for their socialism), she spent three years among women working in the sweated trades in Shoreditch, London. By 1905 she was back in Scotland, living with her uncle, the Rev. Jacob Primmer, in Dunfermline. In October 1906, she joined the WSPU, becoming Dunfermline organiser. But with *Isabella Pearce, *Maggie Moffat and others, disillusioned with the WSPU for what they regarded as its betrayal of democratic principles, she followed *Teresa Billington-Greig into the WFL. In January 1908, she attempted to deliver a petition to the king on his way to open Parliament, and was imprisoned in Holloway for six weeks for demonstrating outside the house of the Secretary of State for War. She became organising secretary of the Scottish Council of the WFL in February 1908; by 1913, there were ten WFL branches in Scotland (the WSPU had three). From 1910 she was on its national executive, campaigning across Britain. On 4 April 1913, she married Sydney Ashman, leather-worker, socialist and conscientious objector. In May she was arrested while defying the government ban on speaking in Hyde Park; later she recalled her thrill at receiving from Sydney a message sewn into a banana. Anna and Sydney Munro-Ashman lived at Thatcham and after 1929 at Padworth, and had a son and daughter. In 1915, she was elected president of the Reading WFL branch. She remained on the WFL executive after 1918, as president (1925–6) and treasurer (after 1933), until the WFL disbanded in 1961. She helped lead the WFL campaign for equal suffrage in the 1920s, writing of ‘the joy of those who put on the armour for the . . . long warfare for the full political equality of women and men’ (Eustance 1998, p. 348). As WFL delegate to the IWSA conference in Paris, 1926, she supported the case for economic equality and the removal of all restrictions on women’s work. Once, writing to her husband, she said, ‘Did you

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know when the socialist ideal first formed in a favourable aspect I thought people only had to hear it to embrace it. That is a good many years ago now . . .’ JR • MS autobiographical notes, private collection; Women’s Library, LSE, 8SUF/B/052, 120 and 170, Oral Evidence. AGC; Eustance, C. (1998) ‘“Daring to be free”: the evolution of women’s political identities in the Women’s Freedom League 1907–30’, DPhil., Univ. of York; ODNB (2004); WSM. Private information: Bob Ashman. MURE, Elizabeth, of Caldwell, born Caldwell, Renfrewshire, c. 1715, died c. 1791. Memoirist and estate manager. Daughter of Anne Stewart, and William Mure of Duncarnock. One of four children, Elizabeth Mure came from a family of literate and improving landowners. Her generation embraced the 18th century. Her only brother, William (1718–76), was an MP and perhaps David Hume’s oldest friend. She took over the family estate on William’s death in 1776, until his son came of age, and returned it to profitability after his spending on improvements. She was an educated commentator on 18th-century Scotland. Her memoir (1790, in Mure of Caldwell, 1854) displays her knowledge of manners, religious and civic controversy, literature, women, education, and the economy – unsurprisingly, since Caldwell was at the heart of a developing linen industry and a centre of dairy production. She should be read in the context of Adam Smith, *Lady Grisell Baillie, and the great ministers of the age (as she thought): Hamilton, Wishart, Hutchison, Craig, Clark, and Leishman. From her years at Caldwell and her brother’s house in Abbeyhill, outside Edinburgh, she has left us very little. But she thought keenly: ‘May not even the love of Liberty become the disease of a State; and Men be enslaved in the worst way by their own passions?’ (ibid., p. 270). ds

• NLS: Mure of Caldwell Papers: Ch. 2635–3799; MSS 4941–5018; NRS: GD1/481/1; GD1/481/5. Mure, E. (1790) ‘Memoir’, in W. Mure of Caldwell (ed.) (1854) Selections from the Family Papers Preserved at Caldwell, I, pp. 259–72. Crawfurd, G., and Robertson, G. (1818) The Shire of Renfrew; Marshall, R. K. (1983) Virgins and Viragos: a history of women in Scotland; Rothschild, E. (2008) ‘David Hume and the seagods of the Atlantic’ in The Atlantic Enlightenment, S. Manning and F. D. Cogliano (eds); Symonds, D. A. (1997) Weep Not for Me: women, ballads, and infanticide in early modern Scotland.

MURRAY, Annabella, Countess of Mar, [Lady Minny],

born Tullibardine, Perthshire 1536, died Stirling, Feb. 1603. Noblewoman, factrix and surrogate mother to James VI. Daughter of Katherine Campbell of Glenorchy, and Sir William Murray of Tullibardine. Annabella Murray married John Erskine (Earl of Mar from 1565) in January 1557. She was labelled a ‘Jesabell’ by John Knox. She and her husband, who was Governor of Stirling Castle and Regent of Scotland (1571–72), converted to Protestantism. They were entrusted with the guardianship of the infant James VI in March 1568. As head of the king’s household and his spokesperson, Annabella Murray rejected advice from the exiled Mary about how to raise James. She was praised by many for her careful nurturing. After Mar’s death in 1572 she took sole charge. As ‘Lady Minny’ she cared for James until 1578, receiving a pension of 2,000 merks. She also proved to be an able factrix of the Mar estates. In 1590 she was given a prominent role in James’s new consort *Anna of Denmark’s household. The queen was outraged when James entrusted the care of their eldest child, Henry, to her and her son the Earl of Mar in 1595 and would not visit him if the dowager countess was present, causing lifelong conflict with the Mar family. By July 1599, caring for Henry became too much for 63-year-old Annabella Murray and his care passed to her daughter Marie, countess of Angus. She died four years later. MMM • NLS: Erskine Murray MSS and Charters; NRS: GD124 Earls of Mar and Kellie. Dawson, J. (ed.) (1997) Campbell Letters 1559–1583; eODNB (Erskine, John). MURRAY, Anne, Lady Halkett, born London 4 Jan. 1623, died Dunfermline 22 April 1699. Writer. Daughter of Jane Drummond, royal governess, and Thomas Murray, Provost of Eton College. Anne Murray is currently best remembered for collaborating with Colonel Joseph Bampfield (then a Royalist spy) to procure female clothing to disguise the Duke of York, later James VII and II, for his escape from St James’s Palace in 1648. Fearing retribution, she left London and arrived in Edinburgh in June 1650. When the English occupation of Scotland began, she accompanied the Countess of Dunfermline to Fyvie. En route, she attended to soldiers wounded at the Battle of Dunbar and, later, argued with Richard Overton about the execution of Charles I. On her return

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to Edinburgh in June 1652, Anne Murray was introduced to Sir James Halkett of Pitfirrane (d. 1670). Due to a combination of debt and anxiety about her prior relationship with Joseph Bampfield, she initially resisted James Halkett’s proposals. Although the exact nature of their relationship is unknown, she had previously agreed to marry Joseph Bampfield, unaware that his first wife was still alive. Eventually, she married James Halkett privately at her sister’s house in Kent on 2 March 1656, then the couple returned to Scotland. According to her own account, the marriage was a happy one, although only one child survived infancy. She was devastated by James Halkett’s death on 21 September 1670, which she mourned and recalled in numerous diary entries until her own death, 29 years later. Antagonistic relations with her step-son, Sir Charles Halkett, led to her removal to Abbot House in Dunfermline in February 1671. The persistent rumours relating to Joseph Bampfield prompted her to write her autobiographical Memoirs. Most criticism focuses on this text and consequently places Lady Halkett within the conventions of either autobiography or romance. A more extensive account of her life can be found in the 14 volumes of extant manuscript Meditations, written from 1650 to 1699 (NLS: MSS 6489–6502). There she predominantly depicts herself as an exemplary widow: ‘A Widow indeed’. Plagued by debt, she maintained herself by taking in aristocratic boarders. She was active in the local community as a midwife, physician, and herbalist. Her religious beliefs were central to her life. Her writing records an active involvement in contemporary social, religious and political events, both locally and nationally. slt • BL: Add. MS 32376; NRS: GD29; NLS: Acc. 6112; NLS: MSS 6407, 6409, 6489–6502. Halkett, A., Lady, Works as above, and see Bibls. Loftis, J. C. (ed.) (1979) The Memoirs of Anne, Lady Halkett and Ann, Lady Fanshawe ; Trill, S. (ed.) (2006) Lady Anne Halkett: memoirs and selected meditations (Bibl.). HSWW (Bibl.); ODNB (2004) (see Halkett, Anne); Stevenson, D. (1996) ‘A lady and her lovers: Anne, Lady Halkett’, in D. Stevenson (ed.) King or Covenant? Voices from Civil War. MURRAY, Catherine, Countess of Dunmore, n. Herbert, born London 31 Oct. 1814, died

Musselburgh 12 Feb. 1886. Promoter of the Harris tweed industry. Daughter of Catherine Romanovich, and George Augustus Herbert, 11th Earl of Pembroke.

Catherine Herbert married Alexander Edward Murray, 6th Earl of Dunmore, in 1836. They had four children. Following the death of her husband in 1845, as Dowager Countess of Dunmore she became responsible for his estates, including the Isle of Harris, on behalf of her four-year-old son. Aware of the hardships suffered by tenants after the potato famine of 1846–7, Lady Dunmore promoted and developed the Harris tweed industry. Impressed by the quality of cloth that islander Norman Macleod showed her in 1846, she commissioned women to weave the Murray family tartan. The first full-length cloth, which was warm, relatively light and shower-resistant, was used to produce clothing for the Dunmore estate-keepers and ghillies. Lady Dunmore also established a scheme to improve the quality of the hand-processed tweed, organising and financing training in Alloa to improve the weaving skills of Harris women, and supporting new blends of natural, more subtle dyes. She also used her wide network of aristocratic friends to promote the advantages of Harris tweed, increasing sales significantly. Further assistance came from Frances Beckett (1821–1902), founder of Scottish Home Industries, who also encouraged the skills of local women and later distributed their work through her London textile warehouse. The appearance of many imitations brought a legal ruling that ‘Harris Tweed’ could only be used to describe cloth woven in the Western Isles. Lady Dunmore also established the Ladies’ Flowering Work School, which taught pupils to embroider using Parisian patterns, selling their work in Glasgow. However, she is best remembered for establishing a sustainable and much-needed local industry, recognised internationally for its quality today. This achievement was recalled in 2009 by Ann MacCallum, n. Yuill (1961–2013), when she commented on her own ground-breaking appointment as the first female general manager at a Harris mill. CLE • Inverness: The Highland Archive Centre, D190 (1961) ‘Notes on the historical development of the Harris tweed industry and the part played by the Harris Tweed Association Ltd’. ‘Our heritage’, www.harristweedscotland.com; Englishwoman’s Review, 34 (1903), pp. 63–5 (obit.); The Herald, 11 May 2013 (obit. Ann MacCallum); Mackenzie, O. (1988) A Hundred Years in the Highlands; McNeill, J. (1851) Report to the Board of Supervision on the Western Highlands and Islands, SP, vol. 3; *ODNB (2004); The Scotsman, 13 Feb. 1886 (obit. Catherine Murray), 18 Oct 1902 (obit. Frances

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MURRAY Beckett); Scott, W. R. (1914) Report to the Board of Agriculture for Scotland on Home Industries in the Highlands and Islands, HMSO; Thompson, F. (1969) Harris Tweed: story of a Hebridean industry.

born Dunkeld 2 August 1754, died Bath 4 April 1808. Gentlewoman and botanist. Daughter of Charlotte Murray, and John Murray, 3rd Duke of Atholl. Charlotte Murray was the eldest of eleven children. Her paternal grandfather was the Jacobite general, Lord George Murray, while her maternal grandfather was his elder brother, the Hanoverian James Murray, 2nd Duke of Atholl. Educated in London, Charlotte Murray never married. Although she spent much of her life in England, she visited Scotland regularly and returned for an extended period in the early 1790s to look after the children of her brother John, 4th Duke of Atholl, following the death of his first wife, Jane Cathcart, in 1790. A 1767 portrait of the Duke and Duchess and their children by Johann Zoffany, set against the background of the River Tay at Dunkeld, shows Charlotte Murray in her early teens, clutching a floral wreath. She went on to live the comfortable life of a gentlewoman, eventually settling in the genteel surroundings of Bath. She was buried in Bath Abbey. Although little is known of her education, it is clear that she was an accomplished botanist. In Bath she compiled The British Garden: A Descriptive Catalogue of Hardy Plants (1799), intended as an accessible introduction to the subject, which she describes as ‘open to almost every curious mind . . . and conducing to health, by affording a continual and engaging motive for air and exercise’ (Murray 1799, i. p. vi). Based on the comparatively new Linnaean classification and using English names wherever possible, her book was described at the time of its publication as ‘an instructive companion to young botanists’ (cited in Henrey 1975, p. 584). chd

MURRAY, Lady Charlotte,

• Blair Castle, Atholl Archives: Boxes 48–9, 59, 65, letters 1762–1808; NLS: Acc. 4567, herbarium of Swiss plants (mounted post-1795) and ms of The British Garden; NLS: MSS 3590, 3592-3, Lynedoch Papers, letters, 1776–89 Murray, C., Work as above. Fussell, G. E. (1950) ‘Lady botanists of the nineteenth century: The Rt. Hon. Lady Charlotte Murray’, Gardeners’ Chronicle, 2; Glover, K. (2011) Elite Women and Polite Society in Eighteenth-Century Scotland; Henrey, B. E. (1975) British Botanical and Horticultural Literature before 1800, ii, p. 584; Stewart-Murray, J. (1907) Chronicles of the Atholl and Tullibardine Families, vols 3, 4.

MURRAY, Lady Elizabeth, Countess of Dysart, suo jure, also Lady Tollemache, Duchess of Lauderdale, baptised London 28 Sept. 1626, died Ham, Surrey, 5 June 1698. Heiress, royalist agent, courtier and patron. Daughter of Catherine Bruce of Clackmannan, and William Murray, 1st Earl of Dysart. Elizabeth Murray was admired for her beauty and intellect, although later detractors noted she was ‘violent in everything she set about . . . She had a restless ambition, lived at a vast expense, and was ravenously covetous’ (Burnet 1723–4, p. 245). In 1648, she married Sir Lionel Tollemache (1624–69), with whom she had several children, including *Elizabeth Tollemache, later Duchess of Argyll. During the Interregnum she controversially befriended Cromwell, yet was also a key member of the secret Sealed Knot society, working for the restoration of Charles II in 1660, for which she was awarded a crown pension. At her father’s death in 1655, she inherited the title of Countess of Dysart, being formally recognised as such in 1670, and having also inherited his properties she ‘had greater independence than most heiresses’ (Rowell 2013, p. 133). An important early patron of the artist Peter Lely, she commissioned from him portraits of various Scots, royalists and family members for her gallery at Ham House. After her first husband’s death, in 1669 she married John Maitland, 2nd Earl of Lauderdale (1616–82), a minister in Charles II’s Cabal cabinet, four months after his first wife’s death. The same year they were created Duke and Duchess of Lauderdale, and were sent to Scotland, where the Duke was Lord High Commissioner. Her cousin, the architect William Bruce, was employed to embellish the Lauderdales’ Scottish homes, Lethington (Lennoxlove), Brunstane, and Thirlestane. Her corruption and political ­machinations equated her with her husband’s despotic rule in Scotland, which lasted until he suffered a stroke in 1680. Much lampooned, she was the inspiration for the character Widow Blackacre in Wycherley’s comedy, The Plain Dealer (1674). dahbt

• Burnet, G. (1723–4) Bishop Burnet’s History of His Own Time ; Cripps, D. (1975) Elizabeth of the Sealed Knot ; ODNB (2004); Paterson, R. C. (2003) King Lauderdale: the corruption of power (Bibl.); Taylor, D. A. H. B. (2002) ‘ “Ravenous Covetousness”, Sir Peter Lely’s portraits of the Duchess of Lauderdale’, History Scotland vol. 2/2; Rowell, C. (ed.) (2013) Ham House: 400 years of collecting and display.

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MBE, born Cardross, Dunbartonshire 21 Jan. 1878, died Cardross 26 March 1960. Suffrage campaigner, historian. Daughter of *Frances Stoddard (see Murray, Frances), author and antiquarian, and David Murray, lawyer and historian. Born into a progressive family, Eunice Guthrie lived virtually all her life in Cardross. Her sister Sylvia Winthrop Murray (1875–1955), her companion and support, studied at Girton, became a missionary with the China Inland Mission before working in their father’s law firm, and joined both the NUWSS and the WFL. Eunice Murray was educated at St Leonards, but did not go to university. Voluntary work with the League of Pity, in a settlement and for temperance, drew her towards politics, with family support; her mother described her as the ‘one who steers straight for the object ahead’ (Murray 1920, p. 262). Finding local apathy and hostility to the suffrage cause, she joined the WFL in 1908, becoming secretary for the ‘Scottish scattered’ (outside the cities). A leading speaker, she was president of the Glasgow branch and in 1913 of the Scottish Council of the WFL. Her pamphlets included Prejudices Old and New (1910). She joined a WFL delegation to Churchill in 1909, and spoke at the 1910 suffrage march in Edinburgh. From the WFL tearoom and bookshop in Sauchiehall Street, Glasgow, she took part in its summer campaign ‘doon the watter’, in Rothesay. One listener felt that if everyone heard her speak, ‘the vote would be won without delay’ (Glasgow Herald 1913, quoted AGC, p. 152). Not openly critical of the WSPU, Eunice Murray disagreed with arson and favoured democratic decision-making. On 17 November 1913 she was charged with obstructing police at Downing Street, noting on the summons that the Scotsmen who saw the PM were not arrested; ‘I as a Scottish woman was, when I went to see Asquith’ (Women’s Library). During the First World War, Eunice and Sylvia Murray did weekend relief work in munitions in Glasgow, and Eunice was absent on unspecified war work. In 1915, she requested an interview with the Secretary for Scotland, proposing an emergency measure granting women votes because of their war effort. She wrote a political novel, The Hidden Tragedy (1917), local history, a memoir of her mother and, notably, works on women’s and social history. Unlike traditional approaches, her Scottish Women of Bygone Days (1930) discussed social and domestic life, funeral practices, witchcraft, women’s education and MURRAY, Eunice Guthrie,

struggles for emancipation. A Gallery of Scottish Women (1935) was in the Scottish tradition of brief lives. Lectures to the SWRI led to Scottish Homespun (1947), on historical costume, trades and tradition, illustrated by dolls in costumes she made herself. In 1918, she stood unsuccessfully for Glasgow (Bridgeton) as an Independent – the first woman to stand for parliament in Scotland. Elected councillor in Dunbartonshire in December 1919, she took on education, health and housing and campaigned for sex equality. She hated complacency: ‘A good cause is an inspiration . . . So many people are content with things as they are’ (diary, July 1896, quoted Mayhall, p. 81). SI • Univ. of Glasgow Library: Murray Collection; Women’s Library, LSE: Autograph Letters collection (vol. XX); Metropolitan Police summons, 17 Nov. 1913; Unpub. diaries (private collection). Murray, E. G., Works as above, and (1920) Frances Murray, a Memoir by her Daughter. AGC; Mayhall, L. E. N. (2000) ‘The making of a suffragette: the uses of reading 1890–1918’, in G. Behlmer and F. Leventhal (eds) Singular Continuities, pp. 75–88; ODNB (2004).

CBE, born Cummertrees, Dumfries, 8 May 1869, died Penn, Bucks., 28 July 1923. Doctor and suffrage campaigner. Daughter of Grace Harriet Graham, and Captain John Murray RN, landed proprietor. Flora Murray qualified MBChBS in 1903 (MD 1905) at the University of Durham, after training in London. In 1908 she became assistant anaesthetist at the Chelsea Hospital for Women, and joined the WSPU. She organised a first-aid unit to treat women injured in militant suffrage actions – notably on ‘Black Friday’ in November 1910. With her companion Louisa Garrett Anderson (1873– 1943), daughter of Elizabeth Garrett Anderson, the first woman to qualify as a doctor in Britain, she worked at a nursing-home in Notting Hill Gate treating hunger-striking suffragette prisoners on release. She personally attended Emmeline Pankhurst and campaigned against forced feeding. In 1912, she and Louisa Garrett Anderson founded the Women’s Hospital for Children in Marylebone. In August 1914, the two women offered a fully equipped surgical unit to the French Red Cross. Their first hospital was in the new Hotel Claridge in Paris, where Flora Murray was Médecin Chef and Louisa Garrett Anderson chief surgeon. In treating the wounded, heavy surgery and acute

MURRAY, Flora,

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sepsis were the norm. As the ‘first women to break down the prejudice of the British War Office’ (Crawford 2002, p. 262), they were asked to organise a British Army hospital near Boulogne, then to run the Endell Street Military Hospital in London, with 17 wards. From March 1916 to October 1919, Flora Murray was Doctor-in-Charge (rank equivalent to Lieutenant-Colonel). She advised *Mona Chalmers Watson on forming the WAAC. All their hospitals were officered, staffed and run by women, except for a few male orderlies. Flora Murray wrote a vivid account of their experience (Murray 1920), dedicated to Louisa Garrett Anderson, ‘Bold, cautious, true and my loving comrade’. They are buried in adjacent graves in Penn. si • Univ. of Durham Library: Archives and Special Collections. Murray, F. (1920) Women as Army Surgeons [1914–19] Crawford, E. (2002) Enterprising Women; Geddes, J. (2007) ‘Deeds and words in the Suffrage Military Hospital in Endell Street’, Medical History, 51 (1), pp. 79–98; Marlow, J. (ed.) (2000) Votes for Women; eODNB; WSM.

n. Stoddard, born New York, USA, 23 Feb. 1843, died Cardross 3 April 1919. Suffragist. Daughter of Frances Stoddard, and Arthur Stoddard, merchant and carpet ­manufacturer. The Stoddard family moved to Scotland in 1844, living first in Glasgow and then in Renfrewshire. Frances Stoddard was educated largely at home, but went to finishing school in London in 1861. In 1867, she and her sister Alice spent 18 months visiting relatives in the USA, where they met Harriet Beecher Stowe; there she was introduced to ‘women’s rights’, about which she vacillated. Only much later in life did she become a committed suffragist. In June 1872, after a lengthy courtship, she married David Murray (1842–1928), a prominent Glasgow lawyer and medieval historian. She had been reluctant to give up her independence, and indeed never wore a wedding ring on the grounds that wives should not do so unless their husbands did the same. The Murrays travelled extensively together, both before and after their marriage, sharing hobbies such as archaeology, geology and botany. They both took a keen interest in the GAHEW and Frances Murray attended lectures for women held at the University of Glasgow. She was also active for many years in delivering lectures and organising concerts, particularly in Cardross, where they had settled. They had one son and three daughters, two of whom, *Eunice Guthrie Murray, and Sylvia

Winthrop Murray (see Murray, Eunice) became active in the WFL. Like many women of her class and generation, Frances Murray encouraged her daughters to press for and take up opportunities that she had been denied. She urged Eunice, who was speaking at suffrage rallies, to ‘Go ahead my daughter – you possess on both sides fighting blood’ (Murray 1920, p. 235). In 1910, she joined Eunice at a suffrage demonstration in Edinburgh and led one of the processions. Looking back on her already long life in 1917, she wrote in defence of the Victorians, noting that whereas in her youth, little higher education and few careers were open to women, ‘The Victorian Era burst through this bondage, and now we have schools and colleges for girls and women’ (ibid., p. 264). As a young woman, in 1877, Frances Murray had said, ‘Before I die I look forward to the fulfilment of sex equality’ (ibid., p. 164). She lived to vote in the 1918 election. EG/GMN • Murray, E. (1920) Frances Murray: a memoir – by her ­daughter.

MURRAY, Frances Porter,

born c. 1708, died Edinburgh 7 Nov. 1777. Directress of the Edinburgh Assembly Rooms. Daughter of Marjory Scott, and David Murray, 5th Viscount Stormont. Nicky Murray lived with her sisters in Smith’s Land, Bailie Fyfe’s Close, Edinburgh. In 1746, a group of gentlemen revived the regular Assemblies, first established by *Margaret Hamilton, Countess of Panmure, at existing premises in New Assembly Close, under a constitution providing for seven Lady Directresses to regulate proceedings and distribute one third of the profits to charity. Nicky Murray, well qualified by her aristocratic background, assumed office in March 1765, and became the best known and one of the most active Directresses until her death. Presiding over the dancing from a high chair at one end, she wore the gold badge of the Lady Directress, embossed with a pelican, symbolising charity. An English traveller commented that she exercised her considerable authority to universal approval ‘with the utmost politeness, affability and good humour’ (Topham, p. 350). Sir Alexander Boswell recorded the ‘order and elegance’ under her direction, ‘Such was thy sway, O famed Miss Nicky Murray!’ (Boswell p. 27). JR

MURRAY, Helen Nicolas (Nicky),

• NRS: GD1/377/5, papers on the Assembly Rooms; Edinburgh Central Library: Minutes of the Edinburgh Assembly, 1746, YML 28A.

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Royal Society of Edinburgh’s Royal Medal, and a CBE for services to science. JDB

Boswell, Sir A. (1810) Edinburgh, or the Ancient Royalty (1810); Carr, R. (2014) Gender and Enlightenment Culture in Eighteenth-Century Scotland; Chambers, R. (1825) Traditions of Edinburgh (2 vols); Jamieson, J. H. (1933) ‘Social Assemblies of the eighteenth century’, Book of the Old Edinburgh Club 19, pp. 33–91; Topham, E. (1776) Letters from Edinburgh.

• Gann, A. and Beggs, J. (2014) ‘Noreen Elizabeth Murray, CBE, 26 February 1935–12 May 2011’, Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society, http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/ rsbm.2014.0009; *eODNB.

MURRAY, Noreen Elizabeth, n. Parker,

MURRAY, Sarah

CBE, FRS, FRSE, born Lancashire 26 Feb. 1935, died Edinburgh 12 May 2011. Geneticist and pioneer of recombinant DNA technology. Daughter of Lilian Sutcliffe, and John Parker, headmaster. Noreen Parker attended Lancaster Girls’ Grammar School, then studied Botany at King’s College London. During research for a PhD (1959) in microbial genetics at the University of Birmingham, she discovered a genetic phenomenon referred to as polarised gene conversion. This was the beginning of a career as a highly gifted geneticist. In 1958 she married Ken Murray, later Professor Sir Kenneth Murray, FRS (1930–2013). They moved to Stanford University, California, transferring in 1964 to Cambridge, UK, where Noreen Murray learned bacterial and bacteriophage genetics from Frank Stahl. In 1968 the couple moved to the University of Edinburgh, where she began studying the phenomenon of restriction-modification (the ability of bacterial cells to ‘restrict’ foreign DNA) using bacteriophage lambda in Escherichia coli. In Cambridge, Ken Murray had learned skills that allowed him to identify the DNA sequences that are cleaved by restriction enzymes. Together, they realised, they had the ability to join different DNA molecules and clone them in bacteriophage lambda. Using elegant genetic approaches, Noreen Murray modified the chromosome of bacteriophage lambda, producing DNA cloning vectors used subsequently by scientists worldwide. In 1984, the Murrays founded the Darwin Trust of Edinburgh, a charitable organisation supporting research in the natural sciences. Noreen Murray served on many scientific committees and was a vice-president of the Royal Society and president of the Genetical Society of Great Britain. Her important contributions to science were honoured by fellowships of the Royal Societies of Edinburgh and London, membership of the European Molecular Biology Organisation, and honorary DScs from six UK universities. She was awarded the Royal Society’s Gabor Medal, the Biochemical Society’s AstraZeneca Award, the Nexxus award (jointly with Ken Murray), the

see AUST, Sarah (1744–1811)

MYLES, Margaret Fraser (Maggie), n. Findlay, born Aberdeen 30 Dec. 1892, died Banchory, Kincardineshire, 15 Feb. 1988. Midwife, midwifery tutor and lecturer, and author. Daughter of Mary McDougall, former domestic servant, and Robert Fraser Finlay, journeyman housepainter. Margaret Findlay grew up in Aberdeen and emigrated to Canada soon after leaving school. There she trained as a nurse in Yorktown, Saskatchewan; in 1919 she married Charles James Myles and in 1920 gave birth to a son. Widowed in that year, she returned to Scotland where she trained as a midwife and worked as a district nurse in Alford, Aberdeenshire. She lost her son to pneumonia in 1924. Canadian qualifications having no exact equivalent in Scotland, she re-trained as a nurse at Edinburgh Royal Infirmary, 1924–7. She was invited to return as matron to the hospital at Yorktown. After three years, she took an education course at McGill University, and then became director of midwifery education in Philadelphia and Detroit. News of a new maternity hospital in Edinburgh, where she hoped to practise as a midwifery tutor, brought her back to the UK in 1935. Having taken a midwifery teacher’s diploma in London, in 1939 she was appointed midwifery tutor to the new Simpson Memorial Maternity Pavilion in Edinburgh. She held the post until her retirement in 1954. She wrote her ground-breaking book Textbook for Midwives: with modern concepts of obstetrics and neo-natal care in 1953, the year before she retired. Maggie Myles produced a further ten editions in her lifetime, each updated with the latest developments and best practice. The book has been translated into many languages and is still recognised as the leading international textbook for midwives, now in its sixteenth edition (2014). She was made Honorary Fellow of the Edinburgh Obstetrical Society in 1978. During her retirement, she went to Ethiopia to teach a new generation of midwives. CC a

• Myles, M., Work as above.

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MYLNE Bramley, S. and Turner, M. (1988), ‘Mrs Margaret Fraser Myles, 1892–1988’, Midwifery 4, pp. 93­–4; Dobson, L. (1985), ‘Gospel according to Myles’, Nursing Times, 81, 10 July, pp. 74–6; ONDB (2004); http://womenofscotland.org.uk/ women/margaret-myles

n. Thomson [P. M. Y.], born Colinton, Midlothian 2 Dec. 1806, died London 15 Jan. 1892. Writer on the situation of women. Daughter of Margaret Millar, and Professor John Thomson of Edinburgh. Grand-daughter of John Millar, Professor of Civil Law at Glasgow and Enlightenment ­historian, Margaret Thomson grew up in the liberal academic circles around her father and her uncle, Professor James Mylne of Glasgow. She recalled how the Reform Act of 1832 had inspired her lifelong support for women’s suffrage: ‘as soon as ever I understood the benefits expected from a £10 franchise, I began to wish that female householders should have it too, thinking it only fair’ (Mylne 1872, p. iii). In 1841, Dr James Young Simpson and the editor of the Westminster Review, William Hickson, persuaded her to publish, using the pseudonym ‘P.M.Y.’, a pioneering article, ‘Woman and her Social Position’, ostensibly a review of major works on the subject by authors including Sydney Smith, Anna Jameson, Caroline Norton and Harriet Martineau. She identified the progress of western

MYLNE, Margaret,

civilisation with the gradual, if still incomplete, equalising of the condition of the sexes, in the spirit of her grandfather’s writings. Ten years before Harriet Taylor Mill’s better-known essay on ‘The Enfranchisement of Women’, Margaret Thomson celebrated the passing of ‘the distinguishing and opprobrious epithet of blue-stocking’ (P.M.Y. 1841, p. 24), called for women who exercised the duties of citizens to enjoy the right to vote, and demanded the reform of the laws affecting married women. She married her cousin, John Millar Mylne, WS, in Edinburgh in 1843. They had two daughters and later moved to London. Margaret Mylne signed the petition for women’s suffrage presented to the House of Commons in 1866, and in 1872 recorded her continuing commitment to that cause in her introduction to a new edition of her 1841 article. JR • P. M.Y. (1841) ‘Woman and Her Social Position’, Westminster Review, 35, pp. 24–52, (1840, 1841) Reviews, ibid., 34, pp. 502–4 and 35, pp. 534–5; Mylne, M. (1872) ‘A Letter to My Friends’, Woman and Her Social Position. An article reprinted from the Westminster Review, No. LXVIII, 1841. [Fletcher, E.] (1875) Autobiography of Mrs Fletcher with Letters and Other Family Memorials, M. Richardson (ed.); (1892) Englishwoman’s Review, CCXIII, pp. 95–6 (obit.); Rendall, J. (2005) ‘“Women that would plague me with rational conversation”: aspiring women and Scottish Whigs, c. 1790–1830’, in S. Knott and B. Taylor (eds) Feminism and the Enlightenment.

N NAIRNE, Carolina, Lady Nairne (1766–1845)

see OLIPHANT, Carolina, Lady

NAIRNE, Margaret, 2nd Lady Nairne, born Edinburgh 1669, died Nairne House, Perthshire 14 Nov. 1747. Jacobite, estate manager. Daughter of Margaret Graham, and Robert Nairne, Lord Strathord and 1st Lord Nairne. The only surviving daughter, Margaret, Lady Nairne, was contracted to marry Lord George Murray, son of John Murray, Marquess of Atholl. When Lord George became ill, she and her mother successfully negotiated a new contract to marry his brother, Lord William Murray (1664–1726) in 1690. He became the 2nd Lord Nairne. Plans for a French invasion and Scottish rising in 1707 resulted in the arrest of Lord Nairne. Lady

Nairne set off to secure his release from prison in London and her letters detail her journey and audience with Queen Anne. This type of episode is recounted in many Jacobite histories and while there is no doubt she was a staunch Jacobite, she was also proficient in many other areas. She undertook planning and construction work, building a new mansion in Perthshire in 1709, and she created an impressive network which expanded her Jacobite connections. As was common to many noblewomen, she worked hard over the years to secure the family interest. Like many Jacobite women, she displayed tremendous management skills, business and legal capabilities which became even more evident after their estates were forfeit. Margaret Nairne outlived her husband, married her daughters into other Perthshire Jacobite 336

MYLNE Bramley, S. and Turner, M. (1988), ‘Mrs Margaret Fraser Myles, 1892–1988’, Midwifery 4, pp. 93­–4; Dobson, L. (1985), ‘Gospel according to Myles’, Nursing Times, 81, 10 July, pp. 74–6; ONDB (2004); http://womenofscotland.org.uk/ women/margaret-myles

n. Thomson [P. M. Y.], born Colinton, Midlothian 2 Dec. 1806, died London 15 Jan. 1892. Writer on the situation of women. Daughter of Margaret Millar, and Professor John Thomson of Edinburgh. Grand-daughter of John Millar, Professor of Civil Law at Glasgow and Enlightenment ­historian, Margaret Thomson grew up in the liberal academic circles around her father and her uncle, Professor James Mylne of Glasgow. She recalled how the Reform Act of 1832 had inspired her lifelong support for women’s suffrage: ‘as soon as ever I understood the benefits expected from a £10 franchise, I began to wish that female householders should have it too, thinking it only fair’ (Mylne 1872, p. iii). In 1841, Dr James Young Simpson and the editor of the Westminster Review, William Hickson, persuaded her to publish, using the pseudonym ‘P.M.Y.’, a pioneering article, ‘Woman and her Social Position’, ostensibly a review of major works on the subject by authors including Sydney Smith, Anna Jameson, Caroline Norton and Harriet Martineau. She identified the progress of western

MYLNE, Margaret,

civilisation with the gradual, if still incomplete, equalising of the condition of the sexes, in the spirit of her grandfather’s writings. Ten years before Harriet Taylor Mill’s better-known essay on ‘The Enfranchisement of Women’, Margaret Thomson celebrated the passing of ‘the distinguishing and opprobrious epithet of blue-stocking’ (P.M.Y. 1841, p. 24), called for women who exercised the duties of citizens to enjoy the right to vote, and demanded the reform of the laws affecting married women. She married her cousin, John Millar Mylne, WS, in Edinburgh in 1843. They had two daughters and later moved to London. Margaret Mylne signed the petition for women’s suffrage presented to the House of Commons in 1866, and in 1872 recorded her continuing commitment to that cause in her introduction to a new edition of her 1841 article. JR • P. M.Y. (1841) ‘Woman and Her Social Position’, Westminster Review, 35, pp. 24–52, (1840, 1841) Reviews, ibid., 34, pp. 502–4 and 35, pp. 534–5; Mylne, M. (1872) ‘A Letter to My Friends’, Woman and Her Social Position. An article reprinted from the Westminster Review, No. LXVIII, 1841. [Fletcher, E.] (1875) Autobiography of Mrs Fletcher with Letters and Other Family Memorials, M. Richardson (ed.); (1892) Englishwoman’s Review, CCXIII, pp. 95–6 (obit.); Rendall, J. (2005) ‘“Women that would plague me with rational conversation”: aspiring women and Scottish Whigs, c. 1790–1830’, in S. Knott and B. Taylor (eds) Feminism and the Enlightenment.

N NAIRNE, Carolina, Lady Nairne (1766–1845)

see OLIPHANT, Carolina, Lady

NAIRNE, Margaret, 2nd Lady Nairne, born Edinburgh 1669, died Nairne House, Perthshire 14 Nov. 1747. Jacobite, estate manager. Daughter of Margaret Graham, and Robert Nairne, Lord Strathord and 1st Lord Nairne. The only surviving daughter, Margaret, Lady Nairne, was contracted to marry Lord George Murray, son of John Murray, Marquess of Atholl. When Lord George became ill, she and her mother successfully negotiated a new contract to marry his brother, Lord William Murray (1664–1726) in 1690. He became the 2nd Lord Nairne. Plans for a French invasion and Scottish rising in 1707 resulted in the arrest of Lord Nairne. Lady

Nairne set off to secure his release from prison in London and her letters detail her journey and audience with Queen Anne. This type of episode is recounted in many Jacobite histories and while there is no doubt she was a staunch Jacobite, she was also proficient in many other areas. She undertook planning and construction work, building a new mansion in Perthshire in 1709, and she created an impressive network which expanded her Jacobite connections. As was common to many noblewomen, she worked hard over the years to secure the family interest. Like many Jacobite women, she displayed tremendous management skills, business and legal capabilities which became even more evident after their estates were forfeit. Margaret Nairne outlived her husband, married her daughters into other Perthshire Jacobite 336

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f­ amilies, and even entertained Charles Edward Stuart before the ’45. NMC • Blair Castle Archive, Blair MS; NRS: Dalhousie Papers GD45. Cowmeadow, N. (2013) ‘Only a Jacobite heroine? Margaret, Lady Nairne (1673–1747)’, in A. MacInnes and D. Hamilton (eds) Jacobitism, Enlightenment and Empire, 1680–1820; eODNB (Nairne, William). NAN EACHAINN FHIONNLAIGH

(1902–82)

see MACKINNON, Nan

NASMYTH, Jane, born 29 March 1788, died 11 May 1867; NASMYTH, Barbara, born 15 April 1790, died 21 Feb. 1870; NASMYTH, Margaret, born 11 April 1791, died 3 Nov. 1869; NASMYTH, Elizabeth, m1 Terry, m2 Richardson, born 2 Sept. 1793, died 10 July 1862; NASMYTH, Anne, m. Bennett, born 13 Nov. 1798, died 28 Jan. 1874; NASMYTH, Charlotte, born 17 Feb. 1804, died 26 July 1884. All born Edinburgh, died Putney. Landscape artists. Daughters of Barbara Foulis, and Alexander Nasmyth, landscape artist. Alexander Nasmyth (1758–1840) was the foremost Scottish landscape artist of his day. All six daughters and their brother Patrick became landscape artists. Elizabeth married Daniel Terry (1789–1829), the actor, in 1815; her second husband was dictionary author Charles Richardson (1775–1865), whom she married in 1835. Anne married William Bennett (d. 1866), a Manchester engineer, in 1838. After Alexander Nasmyth’s death in 1840, a collection of 155 works by father and children was sold at auction. The four unmarried sisters and their mother moved to England to join their siblings. Their father’s will and the aid of their wealthy brother, engineer James, ensured the sisters’ financial independence. Alexander Nasmyth was central to the development of the emerging commercial art world of early 19th-century Edinburgh. The art classes at his house at 47 York Place included classes for ‘ladies’, taught by his daughters. The eldest, Jane, nicknamed ‘Old Solid’ by the family, also helped her father in his business affairs. Among the pupils was *Mary Somerville. Barbara and Anne also ran classes in London. In addition to providing art instruction, the daughters were studio assistants to their father. All exhibited in their own right in public art institutions in Manchester, London and Edinburgh. Most of their works were small and finely detailed landscape paintings in oil or ­watercolour. Barbara’s work focused mainly on

Scottish subjects, while Jane and Margaret painted both English and Scottish landscapes. Elizabeth contributed designs to Walter Scott’s armoury. Anne concentrated on Highland scenery, while Charlotte’s painting was the most flamboyant and wildest of the sisters’ works. sn • Cooksey, J. C. B. (1991) Alexander Nasmyth; DSAA; ODNB (2004) (Nasmyth family) (Bibl.). NEIL, Annie Innes Clydesdale (Andy),‡ m. Dundas, born Glasgow 2 Dec. 1924, died Glasgow 11 Dec. 2004; NEIL, Christina Marion Smith (Chrissie),‡ born Glasgow 22 August 1927, died Glasgow 9 Sept. 1991. Rally champions. Daughters of Annie Neil, draftswoman, and George H. Neil, flesher and pig farmer. Both Andy and Chrissie Neil went to Glasgow High School for Girls. When the Second World War broke out, Andy Neil, aged 15, jumped at the chance to leave school and work on the farm, learning to drive, and regularly driving her father’s trucks to the meat market in the East End of Glasgow. She never did sit a driving test. She loved working with the pigs, and was proud that she could lift as heavy loads as the men. Chrissie Neil, being younger, was evacuated to Pitlochry with her school, went on to graduate in French at the University of Glasgow, and also joined the family business, in the office. When Andy Neil developed an interest in competitive rally driving, she persuaded Chrissie to take an intensive driving course. Chrissie passed her test in under a week and the Neil sisters entered the world of rallying, Andy as driver and Chrissie as navigator. Joining the Lanarkshire Car Club, and going on to win a string of Scottish and British awards, they added a touch of glamour to the rally circuit. Ladies’ teams were unusual, let alone sisters. At the peak of their rallying, Andy set her heart on a Morgan sports car, for which there was a lengthy waiting list. But after Peter Morgan saw her performing competitive road trials, he promised them the next Morgan off the production line, and they won further awards in ‘Toots’ the Morgan. The Neil sisters entered the Monte Carlo Rally twice, in 1954 and 1955 (Chrissie entered alone in 1958, when Andy, who had married Frank Dundas, was expecting her first child.) They always had a tremendous send-off from the RAC in Glasgow, and successfully finished the Monte both times, a significant achievement before seat belts and crash helmets. The sisters took on the running of the pig farm when their father became ill, later selling up to create a small industrial estate on the site. Andy went on

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to have a successful career in sales, and Chrissie became an international fashion designer, trading as Smith Innes. cm • The Herald, 17 Dec. 2004 (obit. Andy Neil). Personal knowledge. NEILL, Elizabeth Grace, n. Campbell, born Edinburgh 24 May 1846, died Wellington, New Zealand, 18 August 1926. Founding nursing reformer in New Zealand. Daughter of Maria Grace Cameron, and James Archibald Campbell, landowner. Grace Campbell grew up on the shores of Loch Awe, and never lost her Highland identity, despite later moving south. After training as a nurse with the Anglican sisterhood of St John in London, she married Dr Channing Neill in 1879, which led to estrangement from her father. In 1886 the Neills, with their son (born 1882), moved to Australia. Widowed in 1888, Grace Neill made a living through journalism and her own typewriting business. This led to her appointment to a Queensland Royal Commission on Labour Conditions. She then moved to New Zealand, where she became the first female inspector of factories. However, it was in another pioneering role, as female inspector of hospitals and charitable institutions, that Grace Neill was best known. Trained under the Nightingale ethos, she made her mark as a nursing reformer between 1895 and her retirement in 1906. She established the first national scheme for state examination and registration of nurses in 1901, and for midwives in 1904, going on to establish the state-run St Helen’s Maternity hospitals to train midwives. Tall, red-headed and cigarette-smoking, Grace Neill was the first woman to gain a senior position in New Zealand’s public service, a founder member of the ICN in 1899, and an honorary member of the Matrons’ Council of Great Britain. When she died in 1926, obituaries testified to her strong character, intellectual qualities and keen sense of humour. mt

• Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington: A. E. I. Bennett Collection, Folders 176, 211; Archives New Zealand, Wellington: Seddon Papers, 3/60. Evening Post (Wellington) 31 August 1894, 19 August 1926; Neill, J. O. C. (1961) Grace Neill; Tennant, M. (1978) ‘Mrs Grace Neill, in the Department of Asylums, Hospitals and Charitable Institutions’, NZ Jour. Hist., April, pp. 3–16; (1992) ‘Neill, Elizabeth Grace 1846–1926’, DNZB, vol. II [updated, 2003]: http://www.dnzb.govt.nz/ NEWBERY, Jessie, n. Rowat, born Paisley 28 May 1864, died Corfe Castle, Dorset, 27 April 1948.

Embroiderer and designer. Daughter of Margaret Hill, and William Rowat, shawl ­manufacturer. The eldest of four children, Jessie Rowat was educated in Paisley and at an Edinburgh boarding school. Following a visit to Italy, she attended GSA where she met and, in 1889, married the headmaster, Fra(ncis) H. Newbery (1855–1946). In 1894 she began to teach embroidery, effectively establishing a department and putting it on the artistic map. Embroidery became part of the diploma course in applied design at GSA and in 1901 special classes were introduced for the training of teachers. Jessie Newbery’s radical views created new aesthetic standards, encouraging simplicity of design, good craftsmanship and the use of easily available materials. The department won international renown. Her creative individuality was expressed in the clothes she made for herself and her children, embroidering distinctive collars, yokes, belts and cuffs that influenced many of her students. Her work, which frequently used the women’s suffrage colours of green, white and violet, was exhibited in Britain, France, Germany, Italy and the US and in many art magazines of the period, notably The Studio, Das Eigenkleid der Frau and Moderne Stickerein. Though best remembered for embroidery, she also taught enamelling, mosaic work and book decoration in the 1890s, and designed stained glass, metalwork and a carpet for Alexander Morton & Co. She retired in 1908, but continued embroidery and her active support of the WSPU. Mary Newbery (1890–1985), the younger of her two daughters, studied painting and design at GSA, then in Paris. She married Archibald Sturrock and lived in Edinburgh where, in later life, she enjoyed popularity as a painter of flowers in watercolour. la • Arthur, E. (1980) ‘Glasgow School of Art embroideries, 1894–1920’, Journal of the Decorative Arts Society, 4, pp. 18– 25; Burkhauser, J. (ed.) (1990) Glasgow Girls ; Cumming, E. (ed.) (1992) Glasgow 1900 Art & Design, (2006) Hand, Heart and Soul: the Arts and Crafts Movement in Scotland; Macfarlane, F. C. and Arthur, E. (1980) Glasgow School of Art Embroidery 1894–1920 ; ODNB (2004) (see Glasgow Girls); Swain, M. (1973) ‘Mrs Jessie R. Newbery (1864–1948)’, Embroidery 24, pp. 104–7, (1978) ‘Mrs Newbery’s dress’, Costume 12, pp. 64–73. NEWBIGIN, Marion Isabel, born Alnwick 23 Sept. 1869, died Edinburgh 20 July 1934. Geographer. Daughter of Emma France, and James Lesslie Newbigin, pharmacist. Marion Newbigin was one of eight children: all five sisters were given as good an education as

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possible – and became feminists; the sons were told to make their way in the world unaided. She studied at University College, Aberystwyth and at the University of Edinburgh (BSc 1893, DSc 1898 by University of London external degree). A student at Edinburgh’s extra-mural School of Medicine for Women, she later lectured in biology and zoology at Edinburgh, at Bedford College, London, and at Patrick Geddes’s Edinburgh summer schools. She was highly regarded as editor of the RSGS Scottish Geographical Magazine from 1902 to 1934: ‘it is difficult to over-estimate the part which Dr Newbigin played in encouraging original work’ (Taylor 1934, p. 367). She also made important original contributions, notably in plant and animal biology and geography, climatology, the political geography of the Balkans and regional geography, and helped to analyse collections dating from the Challenger expedition of 1872–6. The claim that she should be credited with laying ‘the foundations of scientific method’ on which all Scottish geography was built (Adams 1984, p. 10) is, however, unwarranted. Her early training in biology, and in zoology and oceanography underlay her holistic views of human-nature relationships, views reflected in unjustly neglected books (1898, 1901) and in later works of synthesis (1929, 1936). Her work, highly regarded by contemporaries, has continuing resonance, demonstrating commitment to the scientific understanding of the natural world, and to the need to think geographically in order to be a responsible global citizen. cw • NLS: MSS 7782–3, Newbigin papers; RSGS Membership archive: corr., uncatalogued MSS. Newbigin, M. (1898) Colour in Nature: a study in biology, (1901) Life by the Seashore: an introduction to natural history, (1929) A New Regional Geography of the World, (1936) Plant and Animal Geography. Adams, I. et al. (eds) (1984) The Making of Scottish Geography: 100 years of the RSGS; Maddrell, A. M. C. (1997) ‘Scientific discourse and the geographical work of Marion Newbigin’, Scot. Geog. Mag. 113, 1, pp. 33–41; (2011) Complex Locations: women’s geographical work in the UK 1850–1970; ODNB (2004); Taylor, E. G. R. (1934) ‘Obituary: Dr Marion Newbigin’, Geog. Journ., 84, p. 367. Private information (family).

n. Barr, MBE, born Glasgow 3 May 1955, died Harlow 18 Jan. 2007. Paralympian. Daughter of Mary Margaret Conway, bank clerk, and Gavin Barr, teacher. Growing up in Renfrewshire, Isabel Barr was a successful county swimmer. An injury to her

NEWSTEAD, Isabel,

spinal cord caused by a flu virus when she was 19 led to tetraplegia – partial or complete paralysis of all four limbs. In 1975 she enrolled at Port Glasgow Otters, as part of a rehabilitation programme which included swimming. Her determination was noted by Britain’s paraplegic team members and led to an international career. In a 24-year Paralympian career from 1980, Isabel Barr won 14 Olympic medals across three sports: swimming, shooting, and shot put and discus. She won six golds in swimming in 1980 and 1984. In 1988 she won gold in air pistol and in discus, setting a world record. She married John Newstead in 1988, and as Isabel Newstead won gold in air pistol in Sydney in 2000 where she set a world record, defending her gold in 2004. Awarded an MBE in 2000, she became the first high-performance disabled athlete inducted into the Scottish Sports Hall of Fame. GJ • The Herald, 10 Mar. 2007, The Scotsman, 26 Jan. 2007 (obits); Scottish Sports Hall of Fame http://www.sshf.co.uk/ inductees/l-p/isabel-newstead-nee-barr-mbe NEWTON, Janet, of Dalcove, fl. c. 1520–c. 1566. Heiress. Daughter of James Newton of Dalcove. Janet Newton was James Ker of Mersington’s ward. He brutally exploited his legal right to determine her marriage during the 1530s, objecting when she sought to marry Adam Ker of Shaw. For the right to ‘mary quhat partey she plesis’ (NRS, GD239/2/1/8) and be ‘infeft in’ (put in legal possession of ) her father’s lands, he demanded she pay him a £2,000 Scots penalty within a month. Janet Newton was forced to sell a third of her lands to him and mortgage the rest. This was a heavy price, but the methods used by her unscrupulous guardian were not illegal. To make matters worse, Dalcove was attacked by the English in 1544 and 1545. Janet Newton was still trying to buy back her lands in 1550. Widowed before 1554, she married Ralph Haliburton. Her son Thomas Ker of Dalcove succeeded her rather more peaceably. mmm

• NRS: GD239/1/2, GD239/2/1/2, 8, Papers of the Don family of Newton; RD1/6 fo. 222, Register of Deeds; RMS, iii, nos. 1364, 2033; RSS, iii, no. 2330. Anderson, J. and Angus, W. (eds) (1911) Protocol Book of Sir William Corbet, nos. 56, 79; Maley, T. and Elliot, W. (eds) (1993) Selkirk Protocol Books 1511–1547, pp. 118–19.

n. Pease, born Darlington 5 Jan. 1807, died Edinburgh 3 Feb. 1897. Abolitionist and suffragist. Daughter of Elizabeth Beaumont, and Joseph Pease, wool manufacturer.

NICHOL, Elizabeth Pease,

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Elizabeth Pease was born into a north-east England Quaker family with a tradition of involvement in the major social issues of the day. She was actively engaged throughout her life in many campaigns. She founded a Women’s Abolition of Slavery Society in Darlington, not least because women were frequently excluded from the public meetings of the anti-slavery groups, and she was also involved in the campaign in support of the Reform Act of 1832. On 6 July 1853, she married John Nichol (1804–59), Professor of Astronomy at the University of Glasgow, and moved to Glasgow; the ­marriage resulted in her disownment by Quakers, as John Nichol was not a member of the Society of Friends. She moved to Edinburgh shortly after her husband’s death in 1859, but continued her active involvement in the social concerns of the day. She was treasurer of the ENSWS, on which she worked with *Eliza Wigham and her sister Jane, having already met Eliza during the antislavery campaign. Along with some 239 other female householders, she claimed the vote in 1868. She was also involved in the efforts to open up medical education to women. In 1873, she became a member of the first school board to be established in Scotland as a result of the Education Act, and shortly afterwards established the Scottish branch of the anti-­vivisection society formed in London by Frances Power Cobbe. Elizabeth Cady Stanton, US campaigner for women’s rights, records that, on a visit to Edinburgh in 1882, she met Elizabeth Pease Nichol and the two Wigham sisters for the first time since the Anti-Slavery Convention of 1840: ‘Yet I knew Mrs Nichol at once: her strongly marked face was not readily forgotten’ (Stanton [1898] 1971, p. 354). Elizabeth Pease Nichol’s Edinburgh home was apparently a portof-call for many American and English reformers and ­philanthropists and Stanton also notes that ‘Though over eighty years of age, [she] was still awake to all the questions of the hour, and generous in her hospitalities as of yore’ (ibid., p. 355). pfb • John Rylands Library, Manchester: REAS/2/4, letters to Elizabeth Pease Nichol, 1837–1870; Stanton, E. C. [1898] (1971) Eighty Years and More: reminiscences, 1815–97, also at http://digital.library.upenn.edu/ women/ Hall, C., McClelland, K., Rendall, J. (2000) Defining the Victorian Nation: class, race, gender and the British Reform Act of 1867; Orde, A. (2000) Religion, Business and Society in North-East England: the Pease family of Darlington in the nineteenth century; ODNB (2004); Stoddart, A. M. (1899) Elizabeth Pease Nichol; WSM.

‘NICNEVEN’ (or Nicnevin, Nicniven), a name or soubriquet used by several witches from the 1560s onwards. Meaning in Gaelic ‘little daughter of the holy one’, ‘Nicneven’ may indicate a claim to supernatural abilities. (A possible link to ‘Nemain’, a shadowy war-goddess of early Irish mythology, cannot be substantiated without earlier Scottish references.) A ‘Nic Neville’ was executed in St Andrews in 1569. However, several records associate the name with Monzie or Crieff. John Burgh, a folk healer convicted of witchcraft in 1643, said that his knowledge was ‘learned be him frome a wedow woman namet Neane VcClerich, of thrie scoir of yeiris of aidge, quha was sister dochter to Nik Neveing that notorious and infamous witche in Monaie, quha for hir sorcerie and witchcraft was brunt four scoir of yeir since or thairby’ (Smith 1974, p.598). ‘VcClerich’ (‘clerk’s, or priest’s, daughter’) may have been another soubriquet, but she was a real person and her aunt evidently was too. The apparent existence of two ‘Nicnevens’ in the 1560s indicates that the name was already traditional, and its origins are now lost. The name next appeared in Alexander Montgomerie’s celebrated poem, ‘Flyting with Polwarth’ (c. 1580). In this ribald, comic account of the birth and upbringing of his poetic antagonist, Patrick Hume of Polwarth, the infant Polwarth was suckled by ‘Nicneven’ amid much burlesque witch and fairy lore. One version of the poem mentioned ‘Kait of Creife’. This may be connected with a tradition, recorded in the 19th century, about a lucky blue stone then held by the Grahams of Inchbrakie. ‘Kate McNiven’ of Monzie, a witch about to be executed, spat out the stone for the laird in gratitude for his intercession. In the late 20th century, a new ‘Nicneven’ tradition was created when the neo-pagan movement adopted her as a ‘Celtic goddess’. jg

• Hanham, A. (1969) ‘ “The Scottish Hecate”: a wild witch chase’, Scottish Studies, 13; Henderson, L. and Cowan, E. J. (2000) Scottish Fairy Belief: a history; Simpson, J. (1995) ‘ “The weird sisters wandering”: burlesque witchcraft in Montgomerie’s ‘Flyting’, Folklore, 106; Smith, J. I. (ed.) (1974) Selected Justiciary Cases, 1624–1650 vol. iii. NITHSDALE, Winifred, Countess of see MAXWELL, Lady Winifred, Countess of Nithsdale (1672–1749) NOBLE, Mary Jessie McDonald, FRSE, born Edinburgh 23 Feb. 1911, died Lasswade, Midlothian, 20 July 2002. Plant pathologist,

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mycologist. Daughter of Helen Graham Millar, and John Noble, pharmacist. Mary Noble was educated at Mary Erskine School, Edinburgh 1920–9, and at the University of Edinburgh 1929–35. After an honours degree in botany, her PhD was on the mycological aspects of seed pathology, winning the Gunning Victoria Jubilee Prize. Having joined the plant pathology service of the Board of Agriculture, now the SASA, she was concerned with the health of flax fields during the Second World War (linen was used to cover aircraft wings). She was later in charge of seed pathology and mycology. From 1950, she was a member of the ISTA, work which continued after her retirement in 1971. She presided over the first International Symposium of Seed Pathology in 1978, and travelled widely, giving talks and workshops in developing countries. At home she gave much support to Suntrap, the gardening advice centre in Edinburgh. Mary Noble was instrumental in producing the authoritative Handbook of Seed-borne Diseases (4th edn., ISTA, 1990), and the ISTA Handbook of Seed Health Testing, as well as many papers on a variety of plant diseases. Vice-president of the British Mycological Society in 1958, she edited its journal 1972–8. In 1975, she began research on Charles McIntosh, naturalist and postman, whose importance to Scottish cryptogams and connection with Beatrix Potter was unrecognised. She reinstated Beatrix Potter’s reputation as a mycologist and coauthored A Victorian Naturalist – Beatrix Potter’s drawings from the Arnitt collection, lecturing and writing widely thereon. She became FRSE 1958, Companion of the Imperial Service Order 1968, and received the Neill Medal in 1973. jm • Noble, M. Works as above. (2003) BSS News, 80, March; Hadley, G. (2003) ‘Mary Noble (1911–2002): an appreciation’, The Mycologist, 17, 2, Feb.; The Scotsman, 8 August 2002 (obit.). NORGROVE, Linda,‡ born Altnaharra 4 Sept. 1974, died Afghanistan 8 Oct. 2010. Environmental expert, aid worker. Daughter of Lorna McLaren, charity worker, and John Norgrove, engineer. When Linda Norgrove was a child, the family moved to Mangersta, Isle of Lewis, where they managed a croft. Linda attended local school at Uig and the Nicolson Institute, Stornoway. She graduated from the University of Aberdeen in 1996 with first-class honours in tropical environmental

science, including a study period in Oregon and interspersed with major cycling trips in the USA, China, Tibet and Nepal. An MSc (London) on development policy was followed by a year’s study in Mexico. She completed her PhD (Manchester, 2002) on national park management based on research undertaken in Uganda. Thereafter, her career was entirely in environment-related and development projects abroad. From 2002 to 2005 she worked for the World Wildlife Fund’s Forest Programme in Peru. Her first visit to Afghanistan was for the UN (2005–8). She then worked for the UN in Laos and in 2010 returned to Afghanistan as regional director for the American aid company Development Alternatives Inc. (DAI), based in Jalalabad, east of Kabul. The only long-term expatriate on the team, she worked with an Afghan staff of 200, mostly men, while also being anxious to provide development activities for women. Learning Dari, she managed a large budget for community development, chiefly agricultural (e.g. switching from poppy production to other crops). Witnesses remembered her enthusiasm, tact and diplomacy in her post, despite the risks of which she was aware. On 26 September 2010, travelling in Kunar province with three Afghan colleagues, Linda Norgrove was kidnapped by local insurgents associated with the Taliban. Her fellow-hostages were released during initial negotiations but she was held as a potential exchange subject. US troops launched a search, and on 8 October, with British approval, the US Naval Special Warfare Development Group (SEALS) mounted a rescue attempt on the kidnappers’ hideout, killing her captors. But Linda Norgrove died during the attack. It was later officially established that she was fatally wounded by a grenade thrown by one of the rescuers after all the kidnappers were dead. She was flown to the Isle of Lewis to be buried in Ardroil cemetery. Linda Norgrove was posthumously awarded the Robert Burns Humanitarian award (2011). Her parents set up the Linda Norgrove Foundation, a trust giving grants towards education and health in Afghanistan, focusing on women and children. SR • www.lindanorgrovefoundation.org; newspaper reports (The Scotsman, The Independent, The Herald, Oct. 2010); dangerouswomenproject.org (c/o IASH, University of Edinburgh); Wikipedia. Private information.

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O O’DONNELL, Finola (Inion Dubh, ‘the dark daughter’), born western Highlands c. 1552, died c. 1610.

Daughter of *Lady Agnes Campbell, and James MacDonnell of Dunyvaig and the Glens. Finola O’Donnell is credited, along with her mother, with establishing a Scottish–Irish network central to mid-16th century revolt against the English. In August 1569 she went to Ireland to marry the Ulster chief Hugh O’Donnell (d. 1593). This act, together with the marriage of her mother to Turlough Luineach O’Neill, brought together the O’Neills and the O’Donnells, previously rivals, and united the Ulster clans against the English colonisers. Finola O’Donnell possessed a dowry of 1,200 Scottish mercenary troops whose presence, swelling the ranks of Irish rebels, the English viewed with alarm. Although ultimately these alliances were not strong enough to repel the colonial forces, the two women were at the centre of the Scottish-Irish network, working to keep Ulster independent from English rule in Dublin. Finola O’Donnell’s activities were monitored throughout the late 16th century. Her own testimonies provide evidence of female agency in networks and rebellion. In 1588, she stated that she would hire the Spaniards to stir up wars against the English. The threat of Spanish invasion was rightly feared by the English in this period. In 1590, she had plans to overthrow the English sheriff of Donegal. However, by 1600, Irish rebellion was weakening, and despite mercenary support, the Irish and Scottish forces were outnumbered by the English. Nevertheless, she and her supporters waged an aggressive campaign against English ­governors, assassinating several English officials. After the Flight of the Earls from Ireland in 1606, the O’Donnell clan left Ireland for Spain. The eventual defeat of the Irish rebels also marked the end of a period when Ireland could call upon Scottish military aid. aek

• NA: Calendar of State Papers, Ireland, vols 29 (1569), 30 (1570), 3 (1588–92). Knox, A. (2002) ‘ “Barbarous and Pestiferous Women”: female criminality, violence and aggression in sixteenthand seventeenth-century Scotland and Ireland’, in Y. G. Brown and R. Ferguson (eds) Twisted Sisters; ODNB (2004) (Campbell, Agnes).

born probably Airlie before 1503, died Melgund June 1575. Mistress of Cardinal David Beaton. Daughter of Janet Lyle, and James, 1st Lord Ogilvy of Airlie. Born of her father’s fourth marriage, Marion Ogilvy was poorly provided for at his death in 1504 (except as an alternative bride in her sister’s marriage contract of 1503, not implemented). Her association with David Beaton (c. 1494–1546), then abbot of Arbroath, may have begun around 1525 when she wound up her late mother’s affairs at Airlie. She became the mother of Beaton’s eight recorded children, rearing them at Ethie, his castle near Arbroath. She built up considerable property, held from the abbey, frequently appearing in court to defend her rights. An able manager of her affairs, she used a seal and could write. When her sons studied in France she sent them money through an Italian banker. In 1543 the Cardinal obtained a secular property, the barony of North Melgund near Brechin, settling it on her ‘in liferent’ and on their oldest son heritably. Melgund Castle, which he built or rebuilt for his family, displayed the armorial bearings of them both, like those of a landed married couple. She was with Beaton in the castle at St Andrews the night before his assassination on 29 May 1546. After his death, her houses were attacked and papers stolen, but were returned after successful court action. In spring 1547 Marion Ogilvy married William Douglas (otherwise unknown) but was widowed by 18 September; Douglas may have died at the battle of Pinkie (9 September). She spent the rest of her life managing affairs at Melgund, joined in 1572 by her daughter Margaret (see Chisholm, Jane), estranged from her husband, David, 10th Earl of Crawford. The castle was a rallying point for *Queen Mary’s Angus supporters after her escape from Lochleven in 1568. Several relatives were prosecuted as Catholic recusants. When Marion Ogilvy died, she left over £3,000 Scots, including £1,000 in ready money. She asked for burial in the Ogilvy aisle of Kinnell church. Less than two weeks later, her family formally made peace with the Cardinal’s surviving assassin, John Leslie of Parkhill.

OGILVY, Marion, lady of Melgund,

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Marion Ogilvy exemplifies many landed women who managed their affairs single-handed. Her association with the Cardinal, differing little outwardly from marriage, offended those who deplored the double standard by which prelates prosecuted those advocating married clergy, yet lived in open disregard of the rule of clerical celibacy. mhbs • Sanderson, M. H. B. (1987) Mary Stewart’s People (Bibl.), (2001) Cardinal of Scotland: David Beaton c. 1494–1546; *ODNB (2004). OLIPHANT, Carolina, Lady Nairne [Mrs Bogan of Bogan], m. Nairne, born Gask, Perthshire, 16

August 1766, died Gask 26 Oct. 1845. Songwriter. Daughter of Margaret Robertson, and Laurence Oliphant, laird of Gask. The Oliphant family was old and distinguished. Carolina Oliphant’s grandfather and father were Jacobites. One of seven children, she was educated at home and read widely: she admired Thomas Campbell and Robert Burns (although not the more robust pieces) and persuaded her brother Laurence to subscribe to the 1786 edition of Burns. She was equally familiar with Scotland’s song traditions, performed music to a high standard, and painted. In 1806, she married her second cousin, Major William Nairne (1757–1830), born in Ireland to a Perthshire Jacobite family. They moved to Edinburgh, latterly to Caroline Cottage in Western Duddingston where their son, William Murray Nairne, was born in 1808. She became Baroness Nairne in 1824 when the act of attainder affecting her husband’s title was reversed. After his death, she spent 12 years in England, Ireland and, from 1834, continental Europe, with her son, her sister, Margaret, Mrs Keith, and her niece, Margaret Harriet Steuart. During this time she suffered the deaths of her niece, the poet Caroline Oliphant, her nephew Charles Steuart, and Lord Nairne, her only child. In 1843, she returned to Gask where she had a stroke and declined in health. She is buried in the chapel there. Celebrated as ‘The Flower of Strathearn’, Carolina Oliphant is now remembered for her songs, although none appeared under her name while she was alive, for reasons of respectability. Her work shows knowledge of traditional idioms in words and music, making it eminently suitable for performance. It appeared in her lifetime under the pseudonym of ‘Mrs Bogan of Bogan’ in Robert Purdie’s six-volume The Scottish Minstrel (1821–4). The writer was first named, with Mrs

Keith’s approval, in Lays from Strathearn, by Carolina, Baroness Nairne, author of ‘The Land o’ the Leal, etc.’ arranged . . . by Finlay Dun (1846). Many pieces deal with Scotland’s past. The Jacobite ‘Will ye no come back again?’ laments the loss of ‘Bonnie Charlie’. ‘Castell Gloom’ represents a country seat ruined through civil war. Despite her family’s Episcopal affiliations, Carolina Oliphant wrote several Covenanting pieces: ‘The Pentland Hills’ condemns ‘fell Claverhouse’ and mourns the ‘brave and martyr’d men’ who fell at Rullion Green. ‘Dunnottar Castle’ celebrates the actions of Elizabeth Ogilvy in saving the Scottish regalia from Cromwell (see Fletcher, Christian). She often celebrated working people such as ‘The Pleughman’. ‘Caller Herrin’ honours those who put their lives in danger at sea: ‘Darkling as they faced the billows,/A’ to fill the woven willows’. It has obvious sincerity although, like ‘The Pleughman’, its narrator is somewhat sanitised. There are also timeless pieces like the comic ‘The Laird o’ Cockpen’ set to ‘When she cam’ ben, she bobbit’ – Mistress Jean initially responds to the proposal with a decisive ‘Na’, later realising she was ‘daft’. Carolina Oliphant’s deeply held religiosity (an assiduous reader of devotional works and charitable donor, she was sympathetic to the Free Church) is evident in pieces such as the melancholic ‘The Land o’ the Leal’, set to ‘Hey tuttie tattie’, commemorating Mrs Campbell Colquhoun’s ‘bonnie bairn’. Carolina Oliphant’s work was long popular in performance. Despite a sentimental vein perhaps less appealing to a modern audience, its range and ambition merits renewed attention. vb • NLS: MS 981: Corr. etc. Oliphant, C., Work as above. Davis, L. ‘Gender, genre and the imagining of the Scottish nation: the songs of Lady Nairne’, online Scottish Women Poets of the Romantic Period: www.alexanderstreet2.com/ SWRPLive/bios/S7038-D001.html HSWW (Bibl.); Kerrigan, C. (1991) An Anthology of Scottish Women Poets; ODNB (2004); Rogers, C. (1869) Life and Songs of the Baroness Nairne. OLIPHANT, Margaret, n. Oliphant Wilson, born Wallyford 4 April 1828, died Windsor 25 June 1897. Writer. Daughter of Margaret Oliphant, and Francis W. Wilson, clerk. Margaret Oliphant’s literary aspirations were encouraged by her mother, from whom she inherited a deep understanding of Scottish culture, particularly of the ballad tradition. The family moved to Lasswade near Edinburgh, Glasgow and

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Liverpool, where she wrote her first novel, aged 17. Her autobiographical notes contain cameos of her youth in an introverted, lower-middle-class household. She returned to Scotland for various short periods, but her identity as a Scot ‘ran through everything’ and some of her best novels are situated in her birth country. Her first published novel, featuring an astute Scottish spinster, Passages in the Life of Margaret Maitland (1849), brought her literary acclaim and an introduction to the publishing house of Blackwood. On the day of her wedding in 1852 to her artist cousin Frank Oliphant (1818–59), she received the proofs of her novel Katie Stewart. It began a 45-year relationship with Blackwood’s and her beloved ‘Maga’ – Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine. Although she contributed to other literary journals, it was to its editor, John Blackwood, that she turned for financial support when her husband died of tuberculosis in 1859, leaving her with two young children, pregnant with her third child and £1,000 in debt. Her writing moved from being a source of pleasure and interest to the only means by which she fed, clothed and educated her children and later the children of her bankrupt brother. Her notebooks chart the life of a spirited, resourceful woman who experienced a series of bereavements that fell like ‘hammer blows’. Despite her long association with Blackwood’s, recognised when she was asked to write Annals of a Publishing House (1897), and despite continual petitioning, her burden was never eased with an editorship. For the rest of her life, Margaret Oliphant sustained herself and her extended family with her writing, often sacrificing fine tuning for the sake of pressing deadlines. She published more than 90 novels, 50 short stories, around 300 articles and 25 works of non-fiction, including translation, biography and travel writing. She wrote so much that she wore a groove in her right forefinger from overwork. In 1888 she reflected, ‘I don’t think I have ever had two hours undisturbed (except at night, when everyone is in bed) during my whole literary life’. Her literary work was often carried out while tending a sick child. All her children predeceased her: three died in infancy, her 10-year-old daughter Maggie died suddenly in 1864, and her sons Cyril (‘Tiddy’) and Francis Romano (‘Cecco’) in their early 30s, in 1890 and 1894. At the end of her life Margaret Oliphant’s ambivalence about the worth of her literary talent damaged her literary reputation. While there are examples of obvious hack work, there are also notable successes. Her biography The Life

of Edward Irving (1862) was praised by Thomas Carlyle. Also acclaimed was the series of novels about the fictional town of Carlingford, offering a perceptive social critique of English domestic and clerical life and giving special attention to the lives of women. She broke new ground with her heroines, the eponymous Hester (1883), much concerned with the world of banking, and sensible Scottish single women, such as the eponymous Kirsteen (1890). Her stories of the supernatural, published in two collections A Beleaguered City (1880) and A Little Pilgrim in the Unseen (1882), were important and original, subverting Victorian gender roles, and are an expression of her deeply held non-­denominational Christian beliefs and familiarity with Scottish Celtic folklore. Her story ‘The Library Window’ (1896) is one of the finest Scottish short stories ever written. am c ms • NLS: MSS 21501–23000: corr., papers, diaries of Margaret Oliphant; MSS 23218/19: Original notebooks with autobiographical reminiscences; NLS microfilm, Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine ; BL: Add. 54919, corr. with publishers Bentley and Macmillan; Princeton Univ., corr. with American publishers. Oliphant, M. [Mrs], Works as above, and (1990, 2002) The Autobiography of Margaret Oliphant, E. Jay, ed.; [Carlingford series]: (1861) The Executor ; (1863, 1986) The Rector and The Doctor’s Family; (1863, 1986) Salem Chapel; (1864, 1987) The Perpetual Curate ; (1866, 1989 and 2002) Miss Marjoribanks; (1876) Phoebe, Junior ; see also Clarke (1986 and 1987) and NLS catalogue for full lists. Clarke, J. S. (1986) Margaret Oliphant (1828–1897): A Bibliography, Victorian Research Guides 11, St Lucia: Univ. of Queensland; Clarke, J. S. (1997) Margaret Oliphant (1828–1897), Non-Fictional Writings: a bibliography, Victorian Research Guide 26, St Lucia: Univ. of Queensland; ECSWW; Brown, I. et al. (eds) Edinburgh History of Scottish Literature, vol. 2; HSWW (Select Bibl.); Jay, E. (1995) Mrs Oliphant: ‘A Fiction to Herself ’; Kamper, B. (2001) Margaret Oliphant’s Carlingford Series; ODNB (2004); Scriven, A. (2003) ‘Molten sapphires, moments that speak: Margaret Oliphant’s journals’, Folio 6, Spring, pp. 10–12; Williams, M. (1986) Margaret Oliphant: a critical biography. OLIVER, Cordelia McIntyre, n. Patrick, born Glasgow 24 April 1923, died Glasgow 1 Dec. 2009. Artist, critic, writer, curator. Daughter of Flora McCallum, n. Matchett, and Robert Patrick, marine engineer. Cordelia Patrick attended Hutcheson’s Grammar School, Glasgow, excelling in art and English. From 1940 to 1944 she studied drawing and painting at GSA. Contemporaries included

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Margot Sandeman and *Joan Eardley, painters with whom she forged enduring friendships and whose work she later championed as a critic. She won the Guthrie Portrait Prize, gaining her diploma in 1944, going on to teach art at Craigholme School and evening classes in life drawing at GSA, while joining the Glasgow Orpheus Choir and the SSA. In 1948 she married fellow GSA student George Oliver (1920–90), photographer, editor and designer, and lived in London and Edinburgh before returning in 1959 to Glasgow, where she contributed art reviews to The Herald, initially under the moniker ‘Our Art Critic’. Cordelia Oliver later wrote for The Times and became Scottish arts correspondent for The Manchester Guardian. An incisive, emphatic and occasionally vituperative critic, she was renowned for her knowledge of Scottish visual art, but also commented on theatre, dance and opera. From the mid-1960s, she began curating art exhibitions, often on the work of her contemporaries, including, in 1978, the major SAC Scottish ­exhibition Painters in Parallel at ECA, and Crawford and Company: selected work 1928–1978 at Third Eye Centre. A founding member of the latte, she was a staunch supporter of Richard Demarco’s ­curatorial ventures from the 1970s. In the latter part of her career, she wrote exhibition catalogues, critical biographies of Joan Eardley and James Cowie, histories of Scottish Opera and the Citizen’s Theatre, and The Seeing Eye, on her husband’s work. Her own art was exhibited at GSA in 2006 (Festival Drawings 1­ 949–1960) and 2012 (Studio 58: women artists in Glasgow since World War II). The GSA now houses the George and Cordelia Oliver Archive. SCT • www.gsaarchives.net Oliver, C. (1980) James Cowie (Modern Scottish Painters Number 7); (1987) It is a Curious Story: the tale of Scottish Opera, 1962–87; (1988) Joan Eardley RSA; (1998) The Seeing Eye: the life and work of George Oliver; (1999) Magic in the Gorbals: a personal record of the Citizens Theatre. The Guardian, 26 Jan. 2010, The Herald, 21 Dec. 2009 (obits.); eODNB. Private information and correspondence. ORABILIS (or ORABILA), Countess of Mar,

fl. 1172, died before 30 June 1203. Daughter of Nessi, son of William. Orabilis, heiress to the extensive estate of Leuchars in north-east Fife, was the first 12thcentury woman to bring lands in Scotland north of the Forth to a prominent Anglo-French baron,

perhaps a fitting role for someone named after a character from a chivalric chanson de geste. She married Robert de Quincy (d. 1197), and their son Saher de Quincy became first Earl of Winchester and inherited the Fife estates. Between 1172 and 1188, however, Orabilis and de Quincy were divorced and she married Adam son of Duncan, probably a relative of the Earl of Fife. By 1188, she had remarried again, calling herself ‘Countess of Mar’ in a charter relating to St Andrews. Her husband was almost certainly Earl Gilchrist. Orabilis was also a religious benefactor, granting lands to St Andrews and Inchaffray in her own right. mhh • (1841) Liber Cartarum Prioratus Sancti Andree in Scotia; Lindsay, W. A. and Dowden, J. (eds) (1908) Charters, Bulls and Other Documents relating to the Abbey of Inchaffray. O’ROURKE, Mary [Master Joe Petersen], m. Lethbridge, born Helensburgh 26 July 1913,

died Glasgow 24 Dec. 1964. ‘Boy’ soprano, variety singer. Daughter of Hannah Irvine, and James O’Rourke, mason’s labourer. One of a large family, Mary O’Rourke began singing at talent competitions in Glasgow with her elder brother Joe, who possessed a remarkable counter-tenor voice and also had a career in variety, before dying at the age of 35 in 1945. At 17, she went to London to live with her aunt Minnie Irvine and her husband Edward Stebbings. In his youth, Stebbings had performed on the halls as ‘Master Edward Frisby’ and was training his son for a similar career. When the son’s voice broke in 1933, Edward Stebbings persuaded Mary O’Rourke to impersonate a boy’s voice under his tutelage. By this time, she had married George Lethbridge (May 1933) and was pregnant. When initial recordings, issued under the name ‘Master Joe Petersen, the Phenomenal Boy Singer’, proved successful, she went on to make nearly 60 records between 1933 and 1942. Most were issued on the Rex and Eclipse labels and included some attributed to ‘Master Wilfred Eaton’ and ‘Michael Dawney’. She appeared in variety throughout the UK, Germany and Holland, always rigorously maintaining the deception, professionally, that she was a boy. In 1952, following the break-up of her marriage, she returned to Glasgow, where she was hugely popular. At the height of her fame, when she regularly packed the Metropole in Stockwell Street, her performances always followed the same formula: the auditorium would go dark, and a spotlight would

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appear on the curtains as they parted to reveal a small boy, singing his signature, ‘Choirboy’, in a remarkable voice of great purity. Another favourite number was ‘Skylark’, about a boy whose mother has died asking a passing skylark to take a message to her in heaven, which ‘Master Joe’ delivered to devastating effect. The illusion, reliant on Mary’s slight figure, was completed by close-cropped dark hair, a white Eton collar, bow tie and black velvet suit. However, her increasing alcoholism led to professional decline. In 1963, she appeared at the final night of the Glasgow Empire and on STV’s One O’Clock Gang, but the following year she was singing at the Palace bingo hall in the Gorbals. pm • Wappat, F. (1994) Master Joe Petersen. ‘Lismor’ Records, Master Joe Petersen, LISMOR LCOM 5233 (2002). ORR, Christine Grant Millar, m. Stark, born

Edinburgh 10 August 1899, died Edinburgh 18 May 1963. Writer, actress, broadcaster. Daughter of Euphemia Macandrew Millar, and Robert Orr, advocate. Christine Orr received some of her education from home schooling. Aged 19, in 1919, she wrote The Glorious Thing, a First World War novel set in 1916 Edinburgh – an exceptional book for the time: the insight she expressed about wartime emotions belied her young age. She continued to write, and in 1932 founded The Makars drama club. A studio theatre was subsequently created in Edinburgh and the company staged several productions a year, many of them Orr’s own plays. She wrote dramatic prose, but also had a talent for farcical comedies. The club staged an eclectic mix of classical and modern plays. (It amalgamated with Davidson’s Mains Dramatic Club in 1996, becoming The Edinburgh Makars in 2002). While working for the BBC during the Second World War, she met Robert Hynde Stark, a freelance journalist, and they married in 1944. Christine Orr’s writings examine politics, religion, moral philosophy and the roles of women in society. The breadth of subjects ranges from Scottish historical fiction to dramatic novels. She possessed a keen eye for detail, and was a fine, versatile writer, unfortunately mostly forgotten today. YM

• Orr, C. G. M. (1919) The Glorious Thing, (2015) (new edition produced by Publishing Dept., Napier University); (1922) Kate Curlew; (1926) The House of Joy; (1928) Hogmanay; 1929) Artificial Silk; (1935) Hope Takes the High Road; (1936) The Flying Scotswoman [selected titles].

fl. 675–97, born Bernicia, died Mercia. Queen of Mercia. Daughter of *Eanfled and Oswy, Queen and King of Bernicia. OsthryD grew up in Bernicia, which included lands in northern England and southern Scotland. Married to AeDilred of Mercia, probably by arrangement of her brother Ecgfrith, OsthryD became Queen of her people’s greatest enemies. Her remarkable murder by Mercian nobles in 697 implies she had to deal with considerable resentment throughout her queenship. Certainly, she seems to have been both active and influential. AeDilred shook off Ecgfrith’s domination in 679. The death of OsthryD’s brother Aelfwini in this war may have motivated her to be a force in the uneasy peace that followed, and which was maintained even when Bernicia was left vulnerable after Ecgfrith’s death in 685. She witnessed the foundation charter of Peterborough c. 680. A steadfast supporter of the cult of her uncle Oswald (who died fighting AeDilred’s father), OsthryD showed strength of character and aroused Mercian resentment by selecting a Mercian monastery to house his relics. jef OSTHRYð,

• BEHEP; Colgrave, B. (ed.) (1927) The Life of Bishop Wilfrid, cap 40; Swanton, M. (ed.) (1996) The Anglo-Saxon Chronicles, ‘E’ text, sub anni 675, 697. OWENS, Agnes, n. McLearie, m1 Crosbie, m2 Owens, born Milngavie 24 May 1926, died Balloch

13 Oct. 2014. Short-story writer and novelist. Daughter of Jessie Scott, and William McLearie, mill-worker. Agnes McLearie’s father, who had lost a leg at the Battle of the Somme, was after the war employed in the local paper mill. His resolutely unacademic daughter wanted to work there too after attending Bearsden Academy, but her parents insisted she learn typing and shorthand instead. In 1949, she married Sam Crosbie, a man psychologically damaged by his Second World War experiences. Life was hard from the start: the marriage produced four children and lasted through his alcoholism till his death in 1963. Agnes’s marriage to Patrick (Pat) Owens in 1964 produced three more children. Agnes Owens started writing in 1978, while attending a creative writing workshop in Alexandria – where Liz Lochhead, Alasdair Gray and James Kelman were occasional tutors – to ‘get a night out of the house’. She was taking any available job at the time: typist, factory worker, 346

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cleaner. Lochhead, Gray and Kelman all recognised her talent, praising the originality and power of ‘Arabella’, a short story about a wildly eccentric woman. Characters in later works are less bizarre than Arabella, but this story established her practice of presenting ‘ordinary’ lives as extraordinary, celebrating the tenacity that enables people to go on in apparently hopeless circumstances, without self-pity, often with humour. People on the margins – the poor, the eccentric, drunks, down-and-outs, petty criminals and whores – had appeared before in Scottish fiction, but they had not previously been so dominant in their narratives. Gentlemen of the West (1984), a volume of connected short stories, follows the mostly bad fortunes of a bricklayer and his mates, based on the tales of her husband and her son, Patrick. Like Birds in the Wilderness (1987) was a sequel of sorts. Agnes Owens had meanwhile contributed to Lean Tales, alongside Gray and Kelman (1985). In 1994, 1996 and 1998 she published three novellas and a shortstory collection; the gap between 1987 and 1994 is explained by the tragic murder of her son Patrick in 1987, killed, in his mother’s words, by ‘his own kind’. Agnes Owens’s Complete Short Stories and Complete Novellas were published by Polygon (2008 and 2009). In the story ‘A dysfunctional family’, the girl narrator loses her whole family through death, desertion and the social services. Her eventual rescue from her dysfunctional

home means the loss of much that has been distinctive, if deplorable – signaled by her imagined glimpse of her little brother’s face in the cracked window pane of their house. The story is a kind of obituary for Owens’s own writing, the special quality of which is irrecoverable. She is sometimes described as a realist; rather, she pulls together the mundane and the surreal in a way akin to magic realism, yet remarkably its own thing: ‘jovial grand-guignol’ (Ali Smith, 2003). Like writers with whom she is compared – Beryl Bainbridge and Flannery O’Connor – Owens is too idiosyncratic to imitate: she should not be allowed to slip out of sight. DAM c M • NLS: Agnes Owens typescripts, 1984–85, GB233/Acc.8822; Copies of 10 unpublished poems, undated, GB233/Acc.12938; Alasdair Gray etc. press cuttings of reviews, GB233/ Acc.13021/15. Owens, A., Works as above. Gray, A. (2009) ‘Honest poverty and Agnes Owens at 70’, Scottish Review of Books, Oct. 29; Gray, J. (2008) ‘A Conversation with Agnes Owens’, Études écossaises, 11, 207–23; The Herald 14 May 1994, 4 April 2008 (interviews), 27 Oct. 2014 (obit.); HSWW (1997), pp. 624–6; Pirie-Hunter, R. (2015) ‘After Scotland’s literary “Golden Age”: locating Agnes Owens’, MA, Victoria University of Wellington; Smith, A. (2003) ‘On the light side of dark’, The Herald, 27 Sept.; Stark, L. (2000) ‘Agnes Owens’s fiction: untold stories’, in C. Anderson and A. Christianson (eds) Scottish Women’s Fiction 1920s to 1960s; Crosbie, J. edits the Facebook page for Agnes Owens.

P born near Nith-head, 1741, died 1821. Poet. In Isobel Pagan’s Collection of Poems and Songs, published c. 1805, she states that she was born ‘near four miles from Nith-head’ in the south west of Scotland and educated for ‘ten weeks, when I was seven years old,/With a good old religious wife’. She also indicates that she was convivial by nature: ‘I sing a song with mirth and glee,/And sometimes I the whisky pree’ and that she ran a howff at Muirkirk, where she raised her illegitimate child. High spirits and thoughtful qualities are equally present in her work. She composed in

PAGAN, Isobel,

Scots, and was known as ‘Wicked Tibbie’ for her satirical skills (her work was transcribed by a tailor, William Gemmell). Her lyric version of ‘Ca’ the yowes to the knowes’, collected in The Scots Musical Museum (Johnson 1787–1803) by Robert Burns, has a subversive quality. Her heroine is not taken in by lovers’ tricks and, in the tradition of Allan Ramsay’s cautious lover Jenny in The Gentle Shepherd (1725), wants hard currency before she offers herself: ‘gowns and ribbons meet’. On a more dignified note, pieces like ‘The Crook and the Plaid’ elevated those considered to be socially lowly into spiritually high positions. A shepherd 347

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cleaner. Lochhead, Gray and Kelman all recognised her talent, praising the originality and power of ‘Arabella’, a short story about a wildly eccentric woman. Characters in later works are less bizarre than Arabella, but this story established her practice of presenting ‘ordinary’ lives as extraordinary, celebrating the tenacity that enables people to go on in apparently hopeless circumstances, without self-pity, often with humour. People on the margins – the poor, the eccentric, drunks, down-and-outs, petty criminals and whores – had appeared before in Scottish fiction, but they had not previously been so dominant in their narratives. Gentlemen of the West (1984), a volume of connected short stories, follows the mostly bad fortunes of a bricklayer and his mates, based on the tales of her husband and her son, Patrick. Like Birds in the Wilderness (1987) was a sequel of sorts. Agnes Owens had meanwhile contributed to Lean Tales, alongside Gray and Kelman (1985). In 1994, 1996 and 1998 she published three novellas and a shortstory collection; the gap between 1987 and 1994 is explained by the tragic murder of her son Patrick in 1987, killed, in his mother’s words, by ‘his own kind’. Agnes Owens’s Complete Short Stories and Complete Novellas were published by Polygon (2008 and 2009). In the story ‘A dysfunctional family’, the girl narrator loses her whole family through death, desertion and the social services. Her eventual rescue from her dysfunctional

home means the loss of much that has been distinctive, if deplorable – signaled by her imagined glimpse of her little brother’s face in the cracked window pane of their house. The story is a kind of obituary for Owens’s own writing, the special quality of which is irrecoverable. She is sometimes described as a realist; rather, she pulls together the mundane and the surreal in a way akin to magic realism, yet remarkably its own thing: ‘jovial grand-guignol’ (Ali Smith, 2003). Like writers with whom she is compared – Beryl Bainbridge and Flannery O’Connor – Owens is too idiosyncratic to imitate: she should not be allowed to slip out of sight. DAM c M • NLS: Agnes Owens typescripts, 1984–85, GB233/Acc.8822; Copies of 10 unpublished poems, undated, GB233/Acc.12938; Alasdair Gray etc. press cuttings of reviews, GB233/ Acc.13021/15. Owens, A., Works as above. Gray, A. (2009) ‘Honest poverty and Agnes Owens at 70’, Scottish Review of Books, Oct. 29; Gray, J. (2008) ‘A Conversation with Agnes Owens’, Études écossaises, 11, 207–23; The Herald 14 May 1994, 4 April 2008 (interviews), 27 Oct. 2014 (obit.); HSWW (1997), pp. 624–6; Pirie-Hunter, R. (2015) ‘After Scotland’s literary “Golden Age”: locating Agnes Owens’, MA, Victoria University of Wellington; Smith, A. (2003) ‘On the light side of dark’, The Herald, 27 Sept.; Stark, L. (2000) ‘Agnes Owens’s fiction: untold stories’, in C. Anderson and A. Christianson (eds) Scottish Women’s Fiction 1920s to 1960s; Crosbie, J. edits the Facebook page for Agnes Owens.

P born near Nith-head, 1741, died 1821. Poet. In Isobel Pagan’s Collection of Poems and Songs, published c. 1805, she states that she was born ‘near four miles from Nith-head’ in the south west of Scotland and educated for ‘ten weeks, when I was seven years old,/With a good old religious wife’. She also indicates that she was convivial by nature: ‘I sing a song with mirth and glee,/And sometimes I the whisky pree’ and that she ran a howff at Muirkirk, where she raised her illegitimate child. High spirits and thoughtful qualities are equally present in her work. She composed in

PAGAN, Isobel,

Scots, and was known as ‘Wicked Tibbie’ for her satirical skills (her work was transcribed by a tailor, William Gemmell). Her lyric version of ‘Ca’ the yowes to the knowes’, collected in The Scots Musical Museum (Johnson 1787–1803) by Robert Burns, has a subversive quality. Her heroine is not taken in by lovers’ tricks and, in the tradition of Allan Ramsay’s cautious lover Jenny in The Gentle Shepherd (1725), wants hard currency before she offers herself: ‘gowns and ribbons meet’. On a more dignified note, pieces like ‘The Crook and the Plaid’ elevated those considered to be socially lowly into spiritually high positions. A shepherd 347

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lad is compared with the Biblical shepherd David: ‘when he came to be a king, and left his former trade,/’Twas an honour to the laddie that wears the crook and plaid’ (ll. 23–4). While Isobel Pagan’s work has, hitherto, largely been considered as an appendix to Burns’s, its imaginative range deserves more detailed critical consideration. vb

and fish, and where she is buried. ra • Manchester Metropolitan Univ. archives; NLS: Papers, book-plates and etching tools. Addison, R. (1998) ‘Fine lines: Agnes Miller Parker’, Scottish Book Collector, 6/2, pp. 16–19; ODNB (2004); MSW; Rogerson, I. and Dreyfus, J. (1990) Agnes Miller Parker, Wood Engraver and Book Illustrator, 1895–1980; Who’s Who.

• Pagan, I. (1803) A Collection of Poems and Songs on Several Occasions; Johnson, J. (1787–1803) The Scots Musical Museum, vol. III, Song 264 (6 vols, reissued as 2 vols, 1962); Bold, V. (1997) ‘Beyond “The Empire of the Gentle Heart”: Scottish women poets of the nineteenth century’, in HSWW, (2007) James Hogg: a bard of nature’s making; ODNB (2004); Paterson, J. (1840) The Contemporaries of Burns, and the More Recent Poets of Ayrshire, pp. 113–23, (1847) The Ballads and Songs of Ayrshire, pp. 63–6. PANMURE, Margaret, Countess of see HAMILTON, Margaret, Countess of Panmure (1668–1731) PARKER, Agnes Miller, m. McCance, born Irvine 25

March 1895, died Greenock 15 Nov. 1980. Artistwood-engraver. Daughter of Agnes Harriet Mitchell, and William McCall Parker, analytical chemist. The eldest of eight children, after Whitehill Higher Grade School in Glasgow Agnes Miller Parker attended the GSA (Diploma 1916) and tutored until 1920. In 1918, she married fellow-­ artist William McCance (1894–1970). Both received praise as Scottish modernists, particularly from Neil Gunn and Hugh MacDiarmid. Agnes Miller Parker taught art at Gerrards Cross (1920–8) and Clapham (1928–30) and taught herself engraving, learning enough from Gertrude Hermes and her husband, Blair Hughes Stanton, to receive the Walter Brewster Prize for Engraving, Chicago (1929). A lively social life included friendship with *Naomi Mitchison and Marjorie Spring Rice. Agnes Miller Parker’s first published illustrations accompanied How it Happened: Myths and Folk Tales by Rhoda Power (1930) as linocuts. More complex wood engravings appeared in the edition of Esope’s Fables (1931), published while William McCance and Blair Hughes Stanton worked for Gregynog Press (1930–3). Thereafter, Agnes Miller Parker designed many book illustrations. She became an Associate of the RSPEE (1940) and subsequently a Fellow (1953). In 1955, she left her husband. She lived in Glasgow, taught art in a city school, and went on sketching trips with artist Louise Annand. She retired to a house she built with her brothers on Arran (1962) where, according to Who’s Who, she could keep cats, swim

PATERSON, Grace Chalmers, born Glasgow 25 Dec. 1843, died Edinburgh 26 Nov. 1925. Founder of Glasgow School of Cookery. Daughter of Georgina Smith, and William Paterson, merchant. Grace Paterson campaigned for improving the domestic education of working-class girls and women, and was a friend and supporter of *Janet Galloway and the founders of Queen Margaret College, Glasgow, and of *Christian Guthrie Wright, founder of the Edinburgh School of Cookery. She was the first (non-teaching) principal of the Glasgow School of Cookery (1875–1908). One of the early teachers there was Margaret Black, n. McKirdy (1830–1903), writer of a number of books on cookery, laundry and housekeeping, all published by William Collins, who was a director of the GSC. Margaret Black had qualified at the National School of Cookery in Kensington in 1874, and went on to found the West End School of Cookery in 1878. After her death in 1903, her niece, Mary McKirdy, succeeded her as principal, and the two schools eventually merged in 1908 to form the Glasgow and West of Scotland College of Domestic Science (later part of Glasgow Caledonian University). Grace Paterson and Margaret Black were early elected members of the School Board of Glasgow, Paterson in 1885, Black in 1891, and each was active in a number of causes, including temperance and women’s suffrage. Grace Paterson joined the WSPU in 1907. In that year, the Lord Provost of Glasgow commended Grace Paterson’s services to the community as a pioneer of women’s work in the west of Scotland. jm c d

• GCU Archives: Mitchell Library, Glasgow, Minute Books of the Glasgow and West of Scotland Association for Women’s Suffrage. Glasgow Herald, 28 June 1906, 26 Nov. 1907, 30 Nov. 1925 (obit. Paterson); HHGW; Miller, E. (1975) Century of Change 1875–1975; Thompson, W. and McCallum, C. (1998) Glasgow Caledonian University: its origins and evolution; GASHE [Gateway to Archives of Scottish Higher Education] entries on M. Black and G. Paterson by J. O’Brien: www.gashe.archives. gla.ac.uk/contact.html

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PATON PATERSON-BROWN, June, CVO, CBE, n. Garden, born Edinburgh 8 Feb. 1932, died Hawick 6 Dec. 2009. Family planning doctor, Guide Commissioner, Lord Lieutenant. Daughter of Jean Mallace, and Thomas Garden, chartered ­accountant. Educated at Esdaile School, Edinburgh, and Edinburgh University Medical School, she married Peter Neville Paterson-Brown in 1957. They lived in Hawick, where Peter was a general practitioner, and had three sons and a daughter. Professionally, June was an early advocate for family planning and Well Women Clinics in the Borders region. Following a lifelong interest in the Guide movement, she became Scottish Chief Commissioner, 1977–82, and Chief Commissioner of the Girl Guides Association, 1985–1990. As such she was also Commonwealth Chief Commissioner and travelled widely. She was passionate about the part Guiding should play in promoting leadership, tolerance, understanding and friendship, nationally and internationally. In 1989 she was awarded the Silver Fish, Girlguiding’s highest honour. As the Queen’s representative for Roxburgh, Ettrick and Lauderdale in succession to the Duke of Buccleuch, she was the first female Lord Lieutenant in Scotland, serving from 1998 until 2007. She was also a leading figure in many other voluntary associations, local and national. PMR

• Girlguiding Scotland Archives, Glasgow. ‘Farewell to the Chief ’ and ‘Guiding’s Flying Doctor’, Guiding, July 1990, pp. 28 and 31–3; Jebb, M. (2007) The Lord-Lieutenants and their Deputies; The Scotsman, 11 Dec. 2009 (obit.); The Times, 27 Jan. 2010 (obit.); Who’s Who in Scotland (1998).

n. Crombie, born London 29 Jan. 1901, died Grandhome, Aberdeen 21 Oct. 1949. Philanthropist and founder of Aberdeen’s first birth control clinic. Daughter of Minna Wason, and John W. Crombie, Liberal MP. Fenella Crombie spent much of her early life in London, where she was exposed to political life as the daughter of a Liberal MP and grand-daughter of another (Eugene Wason). In 1923 she married John David Paton, of Grandhome, with whom she had two sons and four daughters. The family were based in Aberdeen, where Fenella Paton became President of the Women’s Liberal Association of Central Aberdeenshire, continuing her family’s political legacy. In 1926 she founded the Aberdeen Women’s Welfare Centre, which provided birth control advice to local women. Fenella Paton took

PATON, Fenella,

the leading role in running the clinic, which was initially funded by herself, her mother and a small group of her friends. She continued to fund the premises of the clinic until it was taken over by the local authority in 1948. Throughout her life Fenella Paton was actively involved in a number of charitable and social organisations in Aberdeen, including the YWCA and Oldmachar District Nursing Association. For 12 years she was president of the St Katherine’s Community Club, an association which among other endeavours provided educational and social activities for working-class girls. It is for this work she is particularly praised in her obituary, in which she is described as ‘an idealist who lived up to her ideals’. KTE • BL: Add. MS 58617, Stopes Papers, vol. CLXXI (ff. 193), Corr. between Mrs Marie Stopes and Mrs Fenella Paton; Wellcome Library: Arch. & MSS SA/EUG/C.265, Box 24, Mrs Fenella Paton. Debenham, C. (2014) Birth Control and the Rights of Women: post-suffrage feminism in the early twentieth century; Elliott, K. (2014) ‘Birth control clinics in Scotland, 1926–c. 1939’, Journal of Scottish Historical Studies, 34, 2, pp. 199–217; Horsburgh, F. ‘The back-street beginnings of birth control’, The Press and Journal, 4 Dec. 1972; The Press and Journal, 22 Oct. 1949 (obit.).

m1 Lennox, m2 Wood, born Edinburgh Oct. 1802, died Chapelthorpe, Yorks., 21 July 1864. Singer. Daughter of George Paton, writing-master and amateur violinist, and his wife, n. Crawford. Mary Ann Paton’s great-uncle was a founder of the Aberdeen Musical Society, and she first performed in public, aged eight, as a singer, pianist and harpist. Two other sisters were singers. The family moved to London, and she joined the Haymarket Company, making her debut as Susanna in Mozart’s Le Nozze di Figaro on 3 August 1822. At the height of her career, she had a vocal range from a low D to an E above the stave. Acknowledged as the leading soprano of the day, she sang both traditional operatic roles and new works, including Weber’s Freischütz and operas by M. W. Balfe (1808–70). In April 1826, at Covent Garden, she created, to acclaim, the role of Reiza in Weber’s Oberon, conducted by the composer. In 1824, she married Lord William Pitt Lennox (1799–1881), but they divorced in 1831, and she married the tenor Joseph Wood (1801–90). The Woods undertook two successful operatic tours in the USA (1833–6 and 1840). She is said to have

PATON, Mary Ann,

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introduced Bellini’s operas and Italian bel canto to the USA. Mary Ann Paton is the subject of 14 large-scale portraits in the NPG’s collection in Bodelwyddan Castle, North Wales, including those by Sully, Woolnoth, Hunt and Lane. They show her in costume for roles including Mandane in Thomas Arne’s Artaxerxes. Mandane’s spectacular aria, ‘The Soldier, tir’d of War’s Alarms’, was a showpiece for sopranos all century, and one of her ‘warhorses’. Like another famous soprano, Jenny Lind, she composed a number of sacred solos. pac • Cohen, A. I. (1987, 2nd edn.) International Encyclopedia of Women Composers; Kennedy, M. (1997, 2nd edn.) The Oxford Dictionary of Music; Moore, F. L. (1961) Crowell’s Handbook of World Opera; New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (2001, see under Wood); ODNB (2004); Stieger, F. (1977) Opernlexikon. PEARCE, Isabella Bream [Lily Bell], n. Duncan, born

Glasgow 5 May 1859, died Glasgow 11 Dec. 1929. Socialist propagandist and suffrage campaigner. Daughter of Margaret Fraser, and John Thomson Duncan, mercantile bookkeeper. Isabella Duncan married socialist and spiritualist Charles William Bream Pearce (1840–1905) in 1891. She was active in the 1890s in the Glasgow ILP and was vice-president of the Glasgow Labour Party, president of the Glasgow Women’s Labour Party and a member of the Cathcart School Board. She and her husband were friends of the ILP leader Keir Hardie, supporting his newspaper, Labour Leader, financially. As ‘Lily Bell’, between 1894 and 1898 she contributed a column, ‘Matrons and Maidens’, which covered all aspects of women’s emancipation, with a hardhitting feminist analysis and critique of male power over women. She criticised socialist men for treating women’s emancipation as marginal rather than central to the socialist project. Hardie, however, dismissed her as ‘hopeless’ in 1898, though whether for her journalistic skills or her opinions is not known (FJC, C1898/11). Isabella Pearce was an early advocate of women’s suffrage, on which she spoke at ILP annual conferences in the early 1890s, and after 1900 suffrage was more central to her politics. A leading member of the Glasgow branch of the militant WSPU, in June 1907 she became honorary treasurer of its Scottish Council, and shortly afterwards joint honorary secretary of the Scottish WSPU; between 1906 and 1908 she edited a women’s suffrage column in Forward, the influential local socialist newspaper, again as ‘Lily Bell’. In contemporary debates about the precedence

of class or sex for socialists, she argued strongly that ‘sex autocracy is even more t­ yrannical than class autocracy’ (Forward, 18 May 1907). Her commitment to suffrage may explain why she appears to have played less of a role in socialist politics after 1908; she was a friend of Elizabeth Wolstenholme Elmy and, like Elmy, contributed articles and letters on the suffrage movement to the Westminster Review in 1907–8, and The Freewoman in 1911–12. The Pearces followed the teachings of Thomas Lake Harris, Christian sexual mystic and founder of the American utopian organisation the Brotherhood of the New Life. Through their company, C. W. Pearce & Co., they published Harris’s poetry and imported wine from his Californian community. Isabella Pearce defended his reputation and praised his fearless discussion of sexual issues. JBH • LSE: Francis Johnson Collection (FJC), BLPES. Pearce, I. D. (1907) Westminster Review, 168, pp. 17–22, 622–4, (1908) Westminster Review, 169, pp. 444–51, Labour Leader 1894–8, Forward 1906–8. AGC; Cheadle, T. (2018) Sexual Progressives: reimagining intimacy in Scotland, 1880–1914; Hannam, J. and Hunt, K. (1999) ‘Propagandising as socialist women’, in B. Taithe and T. Thornton (eds) Propaganda; Kazama, M. (1988) ‘Seeking after the “New Morality”: The Freewoman, a radical feminist journal, Nov. 1911–Oct. 1912’, MA, Univ. of York; Lintell, H. (1990) ‘Lily Bell: socialist and feminist, 1894–8’, MA, Bristol Polytechnic; WSM. PEARSON, Alison (Pierson), born c. 1553, died Edinburgh 1588. Visionary accused of witchcraft. Alison Pearson lived in Boarhills, Fife and was healed of childhood illnesses by a vision of her uncle William Simpson, a ghost who associated with the fairies. Simpson became her spirit-guide, advising her in practising as a healer around St Andrews. In 1583 Patrick Adamson, Archbishop of St Andrews, investigated her for witchcraft, but in 1584 became her most notable client. Both she and Adamson were satirised in verse by the Presbyterian polemicist Robert Sempill. Tried for witchcraft in 1588, in her detailed confession she described visions of being carried off to visit the fairy court. The fairies healed her but also beat and threatened her. She had episodes of sleepwalking and was bedridden with apparent catatonia for 20 weeks. Convicted, she was executed in Edinburgh. JG

• Henderson, L. and Cowan, E. J. (2001) Scottish Fairy Belief: a history; Maxwell-Stuart, P. G. (2001) Satan’s Conspiracy: magic and witchcraft in sixteenth-century Scotland; Parkinson, D. J. (2003) ‘“The Legend of the Bishop of St Androis Lyfe”

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PHILLIPS and the survival of Scottish poetry,’ Early Modern Literary Studies, 9.1. PEEBLES, Barbara, fl. 1660–1666. Presbyterian visionary and prophetess. Barbara Peebles was probably part of a Christian praying circle around a radical minister. In 1660, during a severe illness when she believed she was dying, she began to have visionary experiences. As the political situation deteriorated for radical Presbyterianism, she had a vision on 20 July where God confirmed that only Presbyterian church government was licit, revealed future persecutions and martyrdoms, told her the king should fast and repent, and influenced her to ‘manifest’ this vision. Copies of her vision in papers of Glasgow ministers suggest that she did, but that the revelation went no further. In a letter dated 4 December 1666, Barbara Peebles recorded that she saw Christ weep tears of blood over Charles II. She shared divine revelations that any rebellion would fail and that only prayer and fasting should be used. Her visions fit the biblical role model of Hulda, the prophetess who served an Old Testament covenanted king. Her fate is unknown but a Barbara Peebles died in Edinburgh in 1670. LY

• NLS: Wod.Qu.XXVI, Wod.Qu.XXXV, Wod.Fol.XXVII; National Library of New Zealand: Turnbull Library MSY 6821; Scotland’s People, Edinburgh burial records, 17/07/1670. Yeoman, L. (2009) ‘Away with the fairies’ in L. Henderson (ed.) Fantastical Imaginations: the supernatural in Scottish history and culture, pp. 29–46. PENNY, Margaret n. Irvine, born Aberdeen 12 Dec. 1812, died Aberdeen 11 June 1891. Northern pioneer. Daughter of Helen Colvile (or Collie), and George Irvine, weaver. Margaret Penny was the first Scottish woman to accompany her husband north on a wintering expedition to Baffin Island. Only a dozen British women were known to have sailed on whalers, mostly to the South Seas. With her husband Captain William Penny of the whaling ship Lady Franklin, she sailed from Aberdeen in June 1857, returning to the home port on 22 August 1858. Her diary records daily events, descriptions of the land, and her many contacts with the Inuit: ‘Dec. 15th . . . I was on shore in several of their edloos [igloos] . . . can now crawl out & in as well as any Esquimaux & eat mactac [narwhal skin, an antiscorbutic] with pleasure’ (Ross 1997, p. 117). At the end of the voyage the shareholders of the whaling company recognised

her c­ ontribution to the expedition by presenting her with a silver tea service, now in the collection of the City of Aberdeen Art Gallery and Museum. Margaret Penny returned for a second winter in the Arctic in 1863. gh • Druett, J. (1991) Petticoat whalers: whaling wives at sea 1820–1920; Ross, W. G. (1997) This Distant and Unsurveyed Country: a woman’s winter at Baffin Island, 1857–68. PHILLIPS, Caroline Agnes Isabella, born

Kintore, Aberdeenshire 13 Dec. 1870, died Kintore, 13 Jan. 1954. Suffragette, journalist, hotel-keeper. Daughter of Jane Watt, teacher, and James Phillips, schoolmaster. Caroline Phillips was a journalist at the Aberdeen Daily Journal. She was also honorary secretary of the Aberdeen branch of the WSPU ­(1907–8). A collection of her correspondence in this role is archived at Aberdeen Art Gallery. Her letters with the WSPU leadership in London and the leaders of the local Women’s Liberal Association show that she was attempting to negotiate between the official policies of both parties in order to achieve a compromise between the militant acts urged by the London WSPU headquarters and her own desire for a more conciliatory position. In Jan. 1908, the editor of the Journal warned Caroline Phillips against too heavy an involvement in women’s politics, but she continued to use the Journal address and stationery for her correspondence for another year. In early 1909, she was informed by telegram that Ada Flatman and Sylvia Pankhurst were travelling north to replace her and strengthen ties with the London leadership. During the First World War, Caroline Phillips inherited the Station Hotel in Banchory, Aberdeenshire, which she ran until her retirement in the 1940s. SWP

• Aberdeen Art Gallery, The Watt Collection: Caroline Phillips Papers. AGC; Pedersen, S. (2005) ‘The conciliatory suffragette’, History Scotland 5 (2), pp. 29–36; WSM. www.kintore.org.uk/ history/phillips/#.WJmb4JIq2NY PHILLIPS, Mary Elizabeth, born St Mary Bourne, Hampshire, 15 July 1880, died Hove 21 June 1969. Feminist, suffragette. Daughter of Louisa Elizabeth Simms, and William Fleming Phillips, doctor. The family moved to Glasgow where Mary Phillips first became involved with feminism, organising for the GWSAWS. A convinced socialist, realising that constitutional tactics were not for her, she threw in her lot with the WSPU. In November 1907, Christabel Pankhurst invited

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her to become a WSPU organiser, helping with Scottish campaigns. She also wrote a regular column on suffrage for the Glasgow socialist paper, Forward. She was sent to London, possibly for further WSPU training, and served her first imprisonment of six weeks for her part in a raid on Parliament. She found this inspiring, writing to fellow organiser Annot Robinson that she could not ‘look back on Holloway without pleasure!’ (8 April 1908, Robinson Papers). Other aspects of WSPU work were more challenging, and lengthy periods as a district organiser helped overcome the loneliness of itinerant campaigning. She returned to prison in June 1908 and July 1909, going on hunger-strike, but Christabel Pankhurst dissuaded her from further time in gaol, following WSPU policy for organisers. In July 1913, Christabel Pankhurst, from her exile in France, dismissed Mary Phillips from the WSPU. Although she claimed financial motivation, she appears to have begun to doubt her loyalty. Under the pseudonym of Mary Paterson, Mary Phillips then worked for Sylvia Pankhurst in the East End of London during the First World War, then acted briefly as an organiser for the United Suffragists. After the war, she worked for the New Constitutional Society for Women’s Suffrage, the WIL and the Save the Children Fund, but gave up organising in 1928 to edit a daily news service for the brewing trade. In later life she was an active member of the Six Point Group. Also committed to the Suffragette Fellowship, she wrote her own version of the suffrage campaign in a short pamphlet published in 1957. kc • Manchester Central Library: Annot Robinson Papers; Museum of London: Suffragette Fellowship Collection; Private collection: Mary Phillips Papers. Phillips, M. (1957) The Militant Suffrage Campaign in Perspective. Hesketh, P. (1992) My Aunt Edith: the story of a Preston suffragette ; ODNB (2004); Raeburn, A. (1973) The Militant Suffragettes; WSM. PICKFORD, (Lillian) Mary, FRS, FRSE, born Jubbulpore (now Jabalpur) India, 14 August 1902, died Nether Wallop, Hants, 14 Aug. 2002. Neuroendocrinologist. Daughter of Lillian Alice Minnie Wintle, and Herbert Arthur Pickford, colonial businessman. Educated at Wycombe Abbey School and Bedford College, London (BSc Physiology 1925), Mary Pickford became research assistant and

demonstrator at University College London. She worked as house physician in Stafford General Infirmary, then as a locum GP, before a Beit Memorial Fellowship at Cambridge (1936) enabled her to work with E. B. Verney. In 1939 she became Lecturer in Physiology at the University of Edinburgh Medical School, where she spent the rest of her career (Reader 1952, Professor 1966). Her DSc (1957) was from London, where, during the Second World War, she had spent vacations working as a medical officer during air raids. Mary Pickford was an outstanding and respected teacher. Her research contribution was to the understanding and regulation of kidney function. Aware that trauma could lead to kidney failure, she emphasised the importance of the antidiuretic hormone, ADH. Her work relating to oxytocin, responsible for uterine contraction and the let-down of milk, was of particular significance to women’s health. With Sybil Lloyd, she investigated the actions of hormones on the brain. She officially retired in 1972, but continued to carry out research in the UK and abroad. She wrote more than 60 papers, some for The Lancet and the RSE, and chapters in books. She became FRS in 1966, FRSE and FRCP in 1977, and Hon DSc (Heriot-Watt) in 1991. Mary Pickford returned in 1982 to Edinburgh, but spent her last few years in a Hampshire nursing home, where she died on her 100th birthday. A keen amateur painter, she enjoyed being confused with the famous actress of the same name. LS • Pickford, L. M. (1967) Physiology – the part and the whole [Univ. of Edinburgh Inaugural Lecture, 8 May], (1969) The Central Role of Hormones. Bindman, L., Brading A., Tansey, T. (eds) (1992) Women Physiologists; The Guardian, 27 August 2002 (obit.); eODNB.

born Edinburgh 27 March 1779, died Glasgow 6 March 1833. Teacher, litigant in court case concerning lesbianism. Daughter of Jean Brymner, and James Pirie, Edinburgh lawyer. Jane Pirie worked as a governess from 1801 to 1809. A deeply religious Presbyterian, her various employers, as well as *Elizabeth Hamilton, commented on her ability, her zealous care, and her short temper. In 1809 she opened a day and boarding school for girls at Drumsheugh, Edinburgh, in partnership with Marianne Woods (1781–1870) with whom she had formed a close, if tempestuous, friendship. *Jane Cumming, a pupil of mixed race (a point made much of by Jane Pirie’s lawyers later) informed her grandmother, Lady Cumming PIRIE, Jane,

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Gordon, that Pirie and Woods engaged in irregular sexual practices. Helen Cumming Gordon spread the story and all the pupils left. Facing financial ruin, and with nothing remaining to save but their name, the mistresses sued. The case was heard behind closed doors and all involved were sworn to secrecy. Jane Pirie and Marianne Woods narrowly won their case in 1812, but Cumming Gordon appealed to the House of Lords. Marianne Woods obtained a post at Camden House Academy, London, where she had taught previously. By 1851 she was living in Brighton. Jane Pirie remained in Edinburgh, but was unable to find employment, and possibly had a nervous breakdown. In 1819 she began a legal dispute with her sister and brother-in-law, which she lost. The House of Lords dismissed Cumming Gordon’s appeal in 1819, but the fight over damages lasted until 1821. The case inspired Lillian Hellman’s play The Children’s Hour (1934). LRM • Faderman, L. (1985) Scotch Verdict: Miss Pirie and Miss Woods v. Dame Cumming Gordon; ODNB (2004); Woods, M. (1975) Miss Marianne Woods and Miss Jane Pirie against Dame Helen Cumming Gordon. PIRIE, Mary, born Aberdeen 20 Jan. 1822, died Portsoy, Banffshire, 8 Feb. 1885. Botanist and teacher. Daughter of Clementina Anderson, and William Pirie, carpet manufacturer. One of ten children, Mary Pirie developed a passion for botany. In 1860 she published her principal work on flowers, grasses and shrubs, mostly indigenous or imported to Britain. It includes poems and line drawings which may be her own. Her preface indicates a didactic approach: ‘With a view of directing the attention, and encouraging a love for the useful with the beautiful, in the Floral Kingdom, I have endeavoured in [this] work . . . to render popular a science which I fondly love . . .’. Mary Pirie lived latterly in Portsoy, where she ran a small private school. Her second published work, Familiar teachings on natural history (1864), demonstrates her concern with inspiring children with her own love of nature. For many years she contributed a column of lively notes on botany and natural history to the local newspaper, The Banffshire Reporter. ls

• Pirie, M., Works as above, and (1860) Flowers, Grasses and Shrubs, a popular book on botany. Anon. (1908) ‘Notes and Queries’, Aberdeen Journal, 1, 15; Ogilvie, M. and Harvey, J. (eds) (2000) The Biographical Dictionary of Women in Science.

born Milton, Glasgow, 24 July 1874, died South Kensington, London, 19 June 1939. Nuclear and engineering chemist. Daughter of Violet Brown, and the Rev. David Pirret, United Presbyterian minister. One of a large family, Ruth Pirret graduated on 2 April 1898, the first woman to be awarded a BSc from the University of Glasgow. She appears then to have taught at Kilmacolm High School, in Newcastle upon Tyne, and in Arbroath. The work for which she deserves greatest recognition happened between 1909 and 1911 when she collaborated with the nuclear chemist Frederick Soddy, in the University of Glasgow’s physical chemistry department. Together they published two key papers reporting their research on the ratio of radium to uranium in uranium-bearing metals, thus shedding light on the disintegration theory of radioactivity. Such a high profile in nuclear studies was rare for a woman, but while Frederick Soddy was to become a Nobel Laureate in 1921, Ruth Pirret’s career continued as vice-warden of Ashbourne House Hall, University of Manchester. Her later activities are obscure, but in 1924 she published a paper with Guy Dunstan Bengough on the chemical processes of metal corrosion. G. D. Bengough was Principal Scientific Officer at the Chemical Research Laboratory and it seems possible that Ruth Pirret was by then a government research scientist. In London she shared a house with her sister Mary Janet Pirret (1876–1942), MBChB, MD, DPH, an early medical graduate and MOH. ls PIRRET, Ruth,

• Soddy, F. and Pirret, R. (1910) ‘The ratio between uranium and radium in minerals’, Philosophical Magazine, 20, pp. 345–9; Pirret, R. and Soddy, F. (1911) ‘The ratio between uranium and radium in minerals II’, ibid., 21, pp. 652–8; Bengough, G. D., May, R. and Pirret, R. (1924) ‘The causes of rapid corrosion of condenser tubes’, North East Coast Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders. Ogilvie, M. and Harvey, J. (eds) (2000) The Biographical Dictionary of Women in Science ; Rayner-Canham, G. W. and M. F. (1990) ‘Pioneer Women in Nuclear Science’, Amer. Jour. Physics, Nov., pp. 1036–43. PORTER, Jane, born Durham 1776, died Bristol 24 May 1850; PORTER, Anna Maria, born 1778,

died 1832. Historical novelists. Daughters of Jane Blenkinsop, and William Porter, army surgeon. After their father’s death in 1779, their mother moved her younger children to Edinburgh, where they were apparently raised in the company of 353

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Walter Scott among others. Anna Maria Porter ­published the first of more than 14 works of fiction and poetry in 1793–5, Artless Tales. Jane Porter followed suit in 1803 with Thaddeus of Warsaw. Popular, it was translated many times, and she was elected a canoness of the Teutonic order of St Joachim. By then the Porters were in Surrey where, in 1810, Jane published the William Wallace story as The Scottish Chiefs, establishing a type of Scots historical fiction four years before Walter Scott, and inspired by popular accounts: ‘I was hardly six years of age when I first heard the names of William Wallace and Robert Bruce – not from gentlemen and ladies, . . . but from the maids in the nursery, and the serving man in the kitchen’ (Porter 1831, p. 3). For Jane Porter, the warrior past was both transmitted by women, and embodied in them, particularly in a servant, Luckie Forbes, ‘that dear old woman; so shrewd, yet simpleminded . . . reading her Bible, which she did every day. I do not recollect ever seeing any other book in her house; though she knew the history of Scotland, . . . as accurately as if the top of her muckle kist, on which her Bible lay, had been filled with historic chronicles’ (ibid., p. 4). Both sisters were relentlessly productive, publishing historical novels, writing plays, and contributing to periodicals. They collaborated on Tales round a Winter Hearth (1826), and Jane Porter published a novelmemoir written by her brother under her name, Sir Edward Seaward’s Diary, in 1831. Her work remained popular, though it was far from universally admired (ODNB 2004). If their mother had hoped to foster her children’s talents by moving to Edinburgh in 1780, she succeeded: one brother was a painter, another a surgeon. But Anna Maria died of typhus in 1832, and Jane led a nomadic existence thereafter, not having made much money from her writing. ds • Univ. of Durham Library: Archives and Special Collections, Porter corr.; The Lilly Library, Indiana Univ.: Porter MSS. Porter, A., Works as above, and see Bibls.; Porter, J., Works as above, and see Bibls. HSWW (Bibl.); ODNB (2004) (Bibl.). PULLINGER, Dorothée Aurélie Marianne, MBE, m. Martin, born St Aubin-sur-Scie, France, 13 Jan.

1894, died St Peter Port, Guernsey 28 Jan. 1986. Aero and automobile engineer and entrepreneur.

Daughter of Aurélie Bérénice Sitwell, and Thomas Charles Pullinger, engineer. The eldest of twelve children, Dorothée Pullinger attended Loughborough Girls Grammar School, after the family returned to Britain. Her father, a car designer, worked for automobile ­manufacturers Sunbeam, Humber and, finally, Arrol’s at Paisley. Dorothée joined him there, training in the drawing office and foundry, and converting German designs from metric to imperial measurements for UK use. During the First World War, she helped design the BeardmoreHalford-Pullinger aero engine, at Arrol Johnston’s plant at Tongland, Kirkcudbright. Vickers then hired her at their Barrow-in-Furness munitions factory, supervising 7,000 female workers, and she started both an apprenticeship scheme and a football team for the women. After the war, Dorothée Pullinger returned to Tongland, and persuaded Arrol Johnston’s to employ women to build a car she designed specifically for women – the first ever such. The Galloway (10/20 CV, 4 cylinders, capacity 1528cc) remained in production until 1925. Following marriage in 1924 to Edward Marshall Martin (1895–1951), she moved into sales, but annoyed at accusations of stealing a ‘man’s job’, she and her husband opened an industrial steam laundry in Croydon. In 1940, Lord Nuffield employed her to advise him on labour relations with his company’s female munitions workers. She managed thirteen war-time factories and was the only woman on a post-war government committee formed to recruit women into factories. After moving to Guernsey in 1947, she established a new laundry chain, servicing hotels in the post-war tourist boom. Awarded an MBE, she became a member of the Institute of Personnel Management, having been the first woman member of the Institute of Automobile Engineers (1923). There is a plaque to her memory at Vickers, Barrow-in-Furness, and she was the first woman inducted to the Scottish Engineering Hall of Fame (2012). NCB • ODNB (2004); Websites about Galloway car factory: www.old-kirkcudbright.net/books/tongland/factory.htm; www.coloracademy.co. uk/Subjects/Transport/Transport5. htm; www.ideahobby.it/DB-Auto/galloway.html Private information: Lewis Martin (son) and Yvette Le Couvey (daughter).

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Q n. Renton, OBE, born Edinburgh 28 March 1906, died Glasgow 15 Feb. 1999. Hospital matron. Daughter of Ida Sandeman, and David Renton, solicitor. Educated at St Trinneans School, Barbara Renton trained as a nurse at the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh (RIE). She joined the College of Nursing in 1932, obtained her Diplomas in nursing (London 1936) and midwife teaching (1939) and registered as a Sister Tutor in 1946. As Miss Renton, she was the youngest Scottish matron when appointed to the 2,000-bed Emergency Hospital at Bangour in 1940. After the war, she became Matron of the Victoria Infirmary in Glasgow (1946–55) then Lady Superintendent of the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh. She retired to marry Kenneth Quaile, a Glasgow stockbroker, in 1959. Later voluntary work included membership of the Western Region Hospital Board, Chair of the governors of Queen’s College Glasgow, and divisional president of the Bearsden Red Cross. Barbara Renton’s career (she was awarded OBE in 1958) illustrates commitment to public service and continuing professional education. bem

QUAILE, (Ida) Barbara Helen,

• Quaile, B. H. (n.d.) The Story of the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh Nurse Training School 1872–1972. The Scotsman, 5 March 1999 (obit.). QUIBELL, Annie Abernethie,‡ n. Pirie,

born Aberdeen 15 Dec. 1861, died Cambridge 26 Dec. 1927. Artist and Egyptologist. Daughter of Margaret Chalmers Forbes, and William Robinson Pirie, Professor of Divinity, Principal of Aberdeen University. Annie Pirie trained as an artist. She moved to London to further her fascination with Ancient Egypt and studied under Flinders Petrie

at University College London. Together with Rosalind Piaget, she worked as a copyist for Petrie at Saqqara in 1895, making drawings and sketches of the reliefs and sites. She married Petrie’s assistant, James Edward Quibell (1867–1935), with whom she had worked at Thebes, on 6 September 1900. They moved to Egypt when he became an inspector of antiquities there and worked with others to document and protect antiquities as well as the sites they excavated. In 1904 they contributed to the Egyptian exhibition for the World’s Fair in St Louis. Annie Quibell was credited with most of the work on the installation of the display, which included three life-size recreated scenes of Ancient Egyptian life. When Edward Quibell became Keeper of the Cairo Museum in late 1913, she had less archaeological work to undertake and published a series of volumes aimed at the general public. Part of her archive is in the Griffith Institute, Oxford, founded by Egyptologists Francis Llewellyn Griffith (1862–1934) and Nora Christina Cobban Griffith n. Macdonald (1870–1937). Nora Griffith worked as a conservator at the University of Aberdeen’s Archaeological Museum, 1901–7, and after marriage in 1909 assisted her husband. After his death she prepared the collection which formed the basis of the Institute. ALT • Griffith Institute, Oxford: papers and correspondence of Annie Quibell. Quibell, A. A. (1911) The Tomb of Sakkara, (1915) The Pyramids of Giza, (1919) Some Notes on Egyptian History and Art, (1925) A Wayfarer in Egypt. Aberdeen Press and Journal, 19 Jan. 1928 (obit.); ‘Griffith, Francis Llewellyn (1862–1934)’, ODNB (2004); The Times, 18 Jan. 1928 (obit.); http://trowelblazers.com/annie-piriequibell; Young, L. (2014) ‘Annie Abernethie Quibell’, Ancient Egypt 14, 2, pp. 16–23.

R RADCLIFFE, Mary Ann, n. Clayton, baptised Nottingham 18 June 1746, died Edinburgh, shortly before 6 Aug. 1818. Writer. Daughter of Sarah Bladderwick, and James Clayton, retired merchant.

Mary Ann Clayton’s father, an Anglican, died when she was four, leaving her his sole heir. Her mother was a Catholic and sent her to the Bar Convent school, York, from 1758. Her guardians 355

Q n. Renton, OBE, born Edinburgh 28 March 1906, died Glasgow 15 Feb. 1999. Hospital matron. Daughter of Ida Sandeman, and David Renton, solicitor. Educated at St Trinneans School, Barbara Renton trained as a nurse at the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh (RIE). She joined the College of Nursing in 1932, obtained her Diplomas in nursing (London 1936) and midwife teaching (1939) and registered as a Sister Tutor in 1946. As Miss Renton, she was the youngest Scottish matron when appointed to the 2,000-bed Emergency Hospital at Bangour in 1940. After the war, she became Matron of the Victoria Infirmary in Glasgow (1946–55) then Lady Superintendent of the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh. She retired to marry Kenneth Quaile, a Glasgow stockbroker, in 1959. Later voluntary work included membership of the Western Region Hospital Board, Chair of the governors of Queen’s College Glasgow, and divisional president of the Bearsden Red Cross. Barbara Renton’s career (she was awarded OBE in 1958) illustrates commitment to public service and continuing professional education. bem

QUAILE, (Ida) Barbara Helen,

• Quaile, B. H. (n.d.) The Story of the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh Nurse Training School 1872–1972. The Scotsman, 5 March 1999 (obit.). QUIBELL, Annie Abernethie,‡ n. Pirie,

born Aberdeen 15 Dec. 1861, died Cambridge 26 Dec. 1927. Artist and Egyptologist. Daughter of Margaret Chalmers Forbes, and William Robinson Pirie, Professor of Divinity, Principal of Aberdeen University. Annie Pirie trained as an artist. She moved to London to further her fascination with Ancient Egypt and studied under Flinders Petrie

at University College London. Together with Rosalind Piaget, she worked as a copyist for Petrie at Saqqara in 1895, making drawings and sketches of the reliefs and sites. She married Petrie’s assistant, James Edward Quibell (1867–1935), with whom she had worked at Thebes, on 6 September 1900. They moved to Egypt when he became an inspector of antiquities there and worked with others to document and protect antiquities as well as the sites they excavated. In 1904 they contributed to the Egyptian exhibition for the World’s Fair in St Louis. Annie Quibell was credited with most of the work on the installation of the display, which included three life-size recreated scenes of Ancient Egyptian life. When Edward Quibell became Keeper of the Cairo Museum in late 1913, she had less archaeological work to undertake and published a series of volumes aimed at the general public. Part of her archive is in the Griffith Institute, Oxford, founded by Egyptologists Francis Llewellyn Griffith (1862–1934) and Nora Christina Cobban Griffith n. Macdonald (1870–1937). Nora Griffith worked as a conservator at the University of Aberdeen’s Archaeological Museum, 1901–7, and after marriage in 1909 assisted her husband. After his death she prepared the collection which formed the basis of the Institute. ALT • Griffith Institute, Oxford: papers and correspondence of Annie Quibell. Quibell, A. A. (1911) The Tomb of Sakkara, (1915) The Pyramids of Giza, (1919) Some Notes on Egyptian History and Art, (1925) A Wayfarer in Egypt. Aberdeen Press and Journal, 19 Jan. 1928 (obit.); ‘Griffith, Francis Llewellyn (1862–1934)’, ODNB (2004); The Times, 18 Jan. 1928 (obit.); http://trowelblazers.com/annie-piriequibell; Young, L. (2014) ‘Annie Abernethie Quibell’, Ancient Egypt 14, 2, pp. 16–23.

R RADCLIFFE, Mary Ann, n. Clayton, baptised Nottingham 18 June 1746, died Edinburgh, shortly before 6 Aug. 1818. Writer. Daughter of Sarah Bladderwick, and James Clayton, retired merchant.

Mary Ann Clayton’s father, an Anglican, died when she was four, leaving her his sole heir. Her mother was a Catholic and sent her to the Bar Convent school, York, from 1758. Her guardians 355

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later fought her mother’s favouring of her Catholic suitor, Joseph Radcliffe (c. 1715–1804), but after eloping, Mary Ann Clayton was married to him in early 1761 by an Irish Catholic priest, with a later Anglican ceremony in 1762; she had six surviving children. Her picaresque Memoirs tell the story of her struggle for survival, with her fortune managed by trustees and her husband’s businesses failing. Separated from her husband, she ran a coffee house, kept a shop, took in lodgers and sewing, and acted as a chaperone and a governess, moving between London and Edinburgh and continuing to support her children and later grandchildren From 1781 to 1783, Mary Ann Radcliffe was housekeeper for her former schoolfriend Mary Stewart, Countess of Traquair, at whose Peebles home she met the liberal Catholic priest Alexander Geddes. She afterwards remained in Edinburgh, where she ran a boarding-house, saw her eldest daughter married, and found schools or places for her sons, returning to London in 1789. Her Female Advocate; or An Attempt to recover the Rights of Women from Male Usurpation (1799), though disavowing ‘the Amazonian spirit of a Wollstonecraft’ (p. xi), discussed the declining job market for women, which might leave unprotected women with little recourse but prostitution. In 1802, she published two issues of Radcliffe’s New Novelists’ Pocket Magazine. The authorship of several Gothic novels has been wrongly ascribed to her and she is often confused with the English Gothic novelist Ann Radcliffe. From 1803 to her death she lived in Edinburgh, where, after the failure of several business attempts, she published her Memoirs by subscription in 1810, appealing for charitable help in her final, poverty-stricken, years. JR • Radcliffe, M. A. (1810) The Memoirs of Mary Ann Radcliffe in Familiar Letters to Her Female Friend. Blain V., Clements P., Grundy I. (eds) (1990) Feminist Companion to Literature in English; Coleridge, H. J. (1887) St Mary’s Convent, Micklegate Bar, York (1686–1887); Orlando: women’s writing in the British Isles from the beginnings to the present at http://orlando.cambridge.org; Scottish Post Office Directories at http://digital.nls.uk/directories

m. Coates, born Denny 20 Dec. 1872, died Clydebank 12 May 1959. ILP activist and councillor. Daughter of Elizabeth Cossens, and Livingston Rae, ironmonger. Jane Rae became well known as a Clydebank activist through her involvement in the all-out strike that paralysed the giant Singer Sewing Machine works in Clydebank in 1910–11. She

RAE, Jane,

worked in the needle-making department and was among those who felt deeply aggrieved by the increased workloads, wage-rate undercutting and imposition of American scientific management methods (including job timing, work reorganisation and use of the stop-watch) at the factory. She became actively involved in the dispute and found herself, with 400–1,000 others (press accounts vary) sacked for standing up for their rights – a common enough experience for those active in trade unions or in socialist politics at the time. She was described by one of her fellow Singer employees, Bill Lang, as ‘a fiery customer . . . involved in everything’. She was a strikingly tall, strong-willed, studious woman who was, according to her brother John Rae, ‘an intellectual, interested in the progress of society . . . she always wanted to improve the social conditions of the working people’. A contemporary labour activist was Frances (Fanny) Abbott (1892–1971) who worked at Singer’s in 1910–11 and was involved from the 1910s with the ILP and later with organising the Women’s Section of the Labour Party. Jane Rae joined the ILP around this time, inspired, her family recalled, by a Keir Hardie speech. By 1913, she was secretary of the Clydebank branch. Thereafter, her wide-ranging political activities included involvement in the suffrage campaign (chairing a meeting for Emmeline Pankhurst at Clydebank Town Hall), the Co-operative movement and the anti-war movement during the First World War. The period from then until 1928 was her most active in politics. She was elected as a local councillor in Clydebank in 1922: among her particular interests were temperance and education. In these years she involved her whole family in political campaigning – chalking the streets, protesting outside pubs and parading with umbrellas painted with political slogans. Her niece, also Jane Rae, recalled that ‘she would go out with her school bell and get all the children out, like the Pied Piper. Jane in front and all the children all following’. Among her successes in local politics was a policy of not having any pubs licensed within sight of schools in Clydebank. She also became a JP. Her brother recalled that she used her position to protect women who had suffered domestic violence. After her mother died in 1929, Jane Rae married a long-time Australian friend, Alfred Coates, a builder, and emigrated to Australia. They returned about a decade later and settled in the Channel Islands where she witnessed the hardships, ‘disappearances’ and brutalities meted 356

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out to Russian prisoners of war at the time of its occupation by the Nazis. Her family recall that she destroyed all her socialist literature and records of past political involvement at this time as a ­precaution. Jane Rae returned to Clydebank around 1946–7, after the death of her husband. am c i • SOHC: GB 249 SOHC 2/2, quotations from oral evidence from John, Anne, Jane (niece) and Norman Rae, 3 Nov. 1988; Bill Lang, 17 May 1988; Amy Summers (Frances Abbott’s daughter), 15 Jan. 1989. Clydebank Press, 17 June 1913, 17 Sept. 1971; Glasgow Labour History Workshop (1989) The Singer Strike, Clydebank, 1911; Gordon, E. (1991) Women and the Labour Movement in Scotland, 1850–1914; Green, W. (1983) ‘Jane Rae’, Clydebank Local History Journal, 4, Autumn; Hood, J. (1988) The History of Clydebank; Kenefick W. and McIvor, A. (eds) (1996) Roots of Red Clydeside, 1910–1914. RAEGNMAELD, born probably Rheged, fl. mid-7th century. Possibly queen of Bernicia. Daughter of Royth, probably a grandson of Urbgen (i.e. ‘Urien’), king of Rheged. Evidently the first of the two known wives of Oswy of Bernicia, Raegnmaeld (or ‘Rieinmelth’) was a great-grand-daughter of Urbgen (or ‘Urien’) of Rheged, one of the last dominant British (i.e. Welsh-speaking) kings in Northumbria. Her grandfather appears to have been prominent in Northumbrian politics in the 620s, and Raegnmaeld’s career indicates that Urbgen’s descendants were still consequential a generation later. She and Oswy had at least two children: Alchfrith, later king of Deira (655–c. 666), and *Alchfled; it is possible that Aldfrith, king of Northumbria (685–705), was also her son. Neither the date nor the circumstances surrounding the end of the marriage are known; it is possible that Raegnmaeld and Oswy were still married when he became king in 642. JEF

• Morris, J. (1980) British History and Welsh Annals, cc 57, 63; Surtees Society (1841) Liber Vitæ Ecclesiæ Dunelmensis. RAFFLES, Frances Rachel (Franki), born Salford 17 Oct. 1955, died Edinburgh 6 Dec. 1994. Photographer and co-founder of the Zero Tolerance campaign against violence against women. Daughter of Gillian Posnansky, director, Mercury Gallery, London and Edinburgh, and Eric Raffles, textiles manufacturer and farmer. Brought up in London, the third daughter of four children, Franki Raffles studied at the University of St Andrews (1973–7) and thereafter

made Scotland her home. At university she was a strongly committed member of the women’s liberation group and her Marxist-feminism shaped her life and work. She also retained a Jewish cultural identity. In 1978, she moved to Lewis where she and her partner, Martin Sime, restored the 169acre farm at Calanais and kept sheep. She taught herself photography, leading to her first exhibition, Lewis Women, in the Stills Gallery in Edinburgh. She separated from her partner and in 1982, with her daughter, Anna, moved to Edinburgh where she worked as co-ordinator of the Scottish Joint Action Group and began to build a career as a freelance photographer and designer for mainly public sector clients, including the Edinburgh District Council women’s committee. She also developed innovative uses of photography with children and adults with learning difficulties. With Evelyn Gillan (1959–2015) and Susan Hart she developed the Zero Tolerance campaign for the women’s committee, a ground-breaking initiative challenging attitudes to male violence against women and children, launched in 1992. Her approach eschewed images of abused women in favour of images of women and children in domestic settings, apparently comfortable and secure, underlining the familiar but hidden nature of abuse. She helped found the Zero Tolerance Trust to take on that work. Evelyn Gillan went on to campaign on women’s health and health promotion in Scotland and helped bring about a minimum-alcohol-pricing law. She was made an honorary fellow of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh in recognition of her work. Frankie Raffles became a lesbian and in 1983 met Sandy Lunan (b. 1954), who remained her partner until the end of her life. The following year, with Anna they made a year-long journey, mainly by train and local buses, through the Soviet Union, to China, Tibet, Nepal and India, recorded in an exhibition in Edinburgh and London. Other trips with her camera included Zimbabwe, Australia, Mexico and the Dominican Republic. Franki Raffles died giving birth to twin daughters; she was survived by her three daughters, a son, and the daughter she brought up with Sandy Lunan. At the time of her death she was working on ‘Lot’s Wife’, a photographic series on the lives of Soviet-Jewish women immigrants to Israel. Malcolm Chisholm, MP (now MSP), paid tribute in the House of Commons to the ‘brilliant designer’ of the Zero Tolerance campaign (Hansard 5C). si 357

RAGNHILD SIMUNSDATTER • Raffles, F. (1988) Photographers with special needs. Edinburgh Evening News, 8 Dec. 1994 (obit.); Gillan, E. (1995) ‘The strength of one voice’, The Scotsman, 28 Sept. 1995; Gillan, E. and Samson, E. (2000) ‘The Zero Tolerance campaign’, in J. Hamner, and C. Itzin (eds) Home Truths About Domestic Violence ; Hansard 5C, 29 March 1995, col. 944; *ODNB (2004); www.frankirafflesarchive.org www.standrews.ac.uk/library/specialcollections Private information: Emma Feather, Evelyn Gillan, Sandy Lunan, Greg Michaelson, Martin Sime. Personal knowledge. RAGNHILD SIMUNSDATTER,

fl. 1299, Papa Stour,

Shetland. Ragnhild Simunsdatter was possibly the tenant of a farm called Brekasætre (Bragaster) on the island of Papa Stour. The farm was the centre of a fiscal dispute, discussed in a letter written in 1299 by the lawthingmen (judicial representatives) of Shetland to Duke Hakon of Norway, who held Shetland as part of his possessions, having divided the kingdom with his brother King Erik in 1284. The dispute had occurred between Ragnhild, probably a widow, given that she spoke on her own behalf at a meeting, and the ducal official, Lord Thorvald Thoresson, on Papa Stour at Easter 1299, and was concerned with the re-assessment of the arable land there. An angry Ragnhild thought that the new arrangements cheated the Duke of some of his due income. The document, now in the Arnamagnæan Institute, Copenhagen, describes how Ragnhild made a statement in the stofa (log-timbered building) on the ducal farm, where a public meeting was taking place. (The probable site was discovered in an excavation at the Biggings in the 1980s.) She stated that Brekasœtre was not rented with the ducal farm of Uphouse and the Duke was not getting full rent as a result. Thorvald countered by reminding her that many individuals had already been sent by Duke Hakon to deal with this matter. Her response was direct and quoted verbatim: all of those who had dealt with this had betrayed the Duke. She thus accused the powerful Thorvald and other ducal representatives of treachery. This was compounded the next day when Ragnhild called Thorvald ‘Judas’ in public. To clear his name, a document was drawn up at the summer Shetland lawthing assembly, setting out the facts, with a deposition about the rates of rent and tax paid from Papa Stour. The results are unknown, although Lord Thorvald continued to act as the ducal (later royal) representative in Shetland. One can only wonder what ensued for Ragnhild.

This remarkable record of a woman standing up to a powerful official in a remote island shows that women in the medieval Scandinavian world had more freedom to act in a public forum than their sisters in the feudal societies of Europe. To take a stand and to make accusations against an official – apparently fearless of the consequences – is rare evidence of a woman playing a dramatic role, whose accusation was taken very seriously indeed. bec • Ballantyne, J. and Smith, B. (eds) (1999) Shetland Documents 1195–1579; Crawford, B. E. and Ballin Smith, B. (1999) The Biggings, Papa Stour, Shetland; Øye, I. (2002) ‘Ragnhild Simunsdatter and women’s social and economic position in Norse society’, in B. E. Crawford (ed.) Papa Stour and 1299. RAINE, Kathleen Jessie, CBE, m1 Davies, m2 Madge, born Ilford 14 June 1908, died London

7 July 2003. Poet, editor, Blake scholar. Daughter of Jessie Wilkie, and George Raine, teacher and Methodist lay preacher. Kathleen Raine’s epic life-journey had strange beginnings in this strict Methodist household, but one softening influence was her Scottish mother and her Scots tongue, her border ballads and songs: from her Kathleen drew spiritual and artistic inspiration and a powerful, lifelong affinity with Scotland and Scottish culture. Schooling was interrupted during the First World War, when she was sent to live in Bavington, Northumberland, seeding her passion for nature. On a scholarship to Girton College, Cambridge, she studied natural sciences and psychology. Her hasty marriage to Hugh Sykes Davies ended when she eloped with Charles Madge, co-founder of Mass Observation, with whom she had a son and a daughter. Domestic life was not for her, however, and the marriage was dissolved. Stone and Flower, her first book of poetry, was published in 1943. In 1949 she fell in love with Gavin Maxwell, whose homosexuality left that passion ever unrequited. She often stayed with Maxwell at his house at Sandaig, Wester Ross. A bitter quarrel led her, famously, to lay a curse on him, and a series of tragedies followed. In 1956 she fled to Cambridge, then London, lecturing and developing a career as critic and scholar specialising in William Blake and W. B. Yeats. She returned frequently to Scotland. In 1980, aged 72, she began Temenos, a ‘journal of the arts and the imagination’, supported by, among others, Prince Charles. The magazine ran to 13 fat editions, and led to the 358

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founding of the Temenos Academy in 1990. She was closely associated with the Scottish Poetry Library from its beginning. Active to the end, Kathleen Raine was a unique, patrician spirit, defiantly individual, proudly élitist, and always true to the universality of her vision of life as noble and, at least potentially, enlightening for all. She received many honorary degrees, prizes and honours, including the Queen’s Gold Medal for Poetry, (1992), Commander of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres, and CBE (2000). jmh • Girton College Archives: papers of Kathleen Raine; interview with Joy Hendry (1994) Agenda, 31, 4 and 32, 1. Raine, K. J., Work as above, and [poetry] (1946) Living in Time, (1949) The Pythoness, (1952) The Year One, (1956) Collected Poems, (1965) The Hollow Hill; [criticism] (1973) Yeats, the Tarot and the Golden Dawn, (1979) Blake and the New Age ; [autobiography] (1973) Farewell Happy Fields, (1975) The Land Unknown, (1977) The Lion’s Mouth, (1991) India Seen Afar ; (2002) ‘The Supreme Companionship’, Chapman no. 100–101. The Land Unknown, (1977) The Lion’s Mouth, (1991) India Seen Afar; (2002) ‘The Supreme Companionship’, Chapman no. 100–101; eODNB. Private information from Kathleen Raine. RALPHSON, Mary (Trooper Mary), n. Cameron, born

Inverlochy, near Fort William 1 Jan. 1698, died Liverpool 27 June 1808. Soldier. In 1741, Mary Ralphson followed her husband to war. Ralph Ralphson was a trooper in the 3rd Dragoons. At the Battle of Dettingen (June 1743), she donned the uniform and mounted the horse of a fallen dragoon and rode off to find her husband. She subsequently fought beside him at Fontenoy (May 1745) and against the Jacobites at the skirmish at Clifton near Penrith (Dec. 1745) and the Battle of Falkirk (Jan. 1746). She is said also to have fought at Culloden (April 1746), but this seems doubtful as the 3rd Dragoons were stationed in Dundee from February 1746 until after the Jacobite defeat. When her husband died c. 1747, Mary Ralphson left the army and lived for over 50 years in Liverpool. Supported by a group of mainly female well-wishers, she became a local celebrity due to her soldiering past and her longevity. She died aged 110 and was buried in the kirkyard of the Scots Kirk in Liverpool’s Oldham Street. Both the church building and the graveyard have since disappeared beneath later development. MEC

• Cannon, R. (1847) Historical Record of the Third, or the King’s Own Regiment of Light Dragoons; (1809) The Scots

Magazine and Edinburgh Literary Miscellany, vol. 71, p. 570; (1807) The Universal Magazine, vol. 8, p. 371. RAMSAY, Christian (Christina), Countess of Dalhousie, n. Broun, born Coalstoun 28 Feb.

1786, died Edinburgh 22 Jan. 1839. Plant ­collector. Daughter of Christian McDowal, and Charles Broun, advocate. In May 1805, Christian Broun married George (Ramsay), 9th Earl of Dalhousie (1770–1838), who fought at Waterloo and became GovernorGeneral of Nova Scotia, 1816, Governor-in-Chief of Canada, 1819–28 and later Commander-in-Chief of India. George was a former schoolfellow of Sir Walter Scott, who described him as ‘steady, wise, and generous’ and Christian Broun as ‘an amiable, intelligent and lively woman’ (Journal, 30 March 1829). Only their third son survived to become the 10th Earl (later achieving distinction as GovernorGeneral of India, and Marquis of Dalhousie and the Punjab). Like several early women plant collectors, Lady Dalhousie was enabled to travel by following her husband on his postings. She made collections of plants in Nova Scotia and in Simla, Penang and other parts of India from 1816 to 1828. Her correspondence from 1826 to 1833 with W. J. Hooker, afterwards Director of Kew Gardens, records that she sent him many of her plants. She presented her Indian herbarium, consisting of about 1,200 specimens, to the BSE c. 1836, and she is commemorated in the plant genus dalhousiea. She died suddenly, aged 53, in Dean Ramsay’s house. He later wrote of her that she ‘was eminently distinguished for a fund of the most varied knowledge, for clear and powerful judgement, for acute observation, for a kind heart, a brilliant wit’ (Ramsay 1924 edn., pp. 224–5). aw

• Desmond, R. (1977) Dictionary of British and Irish Botanists and Horticulturalists; Gibbs, Hon. V. (ed.) (1916) The Complete Peerage, vol. IV; Hooker, J. D. and Thomson, T. (1855) Flora Indica, p. 70; Nelmes, E. and Cuthbertson, W. (eds) (1931) Portraits and Biographical Notes, Curtis’s Botanical Magazine, Dedications 1827–1927, pp. 27–8; ODNB (2004); Ramsay, E. B. (1857, 1924) Reminiscences of Scottish Life and Character ; Smith, W. W. (1970) The Royal Botanic Garden 1670–1970, p. 115; Trans. Bot. Soc. Edinburgh (1836–7) p. 50, 1837–38, p. 40, 1838–39, p. 52; Wells, J. (2017) ‘An accomplished Scotswoman reads Austen abroad: Christian, Countess of Dalhousie, in British North America’, in Reading Austen in America. RANDOLPH, Agnes (Black Agnes of Dunbar), Countess of Dunbar and March, born before 1324,

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died c. 1369. Defender of Scottish independence. Daughter of Isabel Stewart, and Thomas Randolph, Earl of Moray, Regent of Scotland. Known as ‘Black Agnes’ because of her dark complexion, Agnes Randolph was a member of a family active in the cause of Scottish independence. Her father and her brother John both served as regents; John was captured by the English shortly after becoming co-regent in 1335. Agnes Randolph had married Patrick, Earl of Dunbar and March (d. 1369), by 1324. As Governor of Berwick, captured by the English in 1333, Earl Patrick swore allegiance to Edward III who gave him permission to re-fortify his castle of Dunbar. In 1335, Patrick switched allegiance and Dunbar became a centre of the struggle against English occupation. A force of 20,000 men was sent to take the castle, arriving on 13 January 1338. In Earl Patrick’s absence, Dunbar’s defence was undertaken by his wife. Black Agnes’s defence of Dunbar has become one of the most famous stories of the Wars of Independence. Medieval chroniclers recount how, after a bombardment, Agnes or one of her ladies appeared on the battlements to wipe away the dust with white handkerchiefs. When the besiegers threatened to execute her brother, she pointed out that would make her Countess of Moray. Moreover, as the castle was her husband’s, she had no power to surrender it. A song was penned by one of the English soldiers: ‘Come I early, come I late, I find Annes at the gate’ (Wyntoun 1903–14, vi, pp. 90–1). After five months, the besiegers withdrew to join Edward III in France for what became known as the Hundred Years War. The hugely expensive siege had resulted in no gain. When John, Earl of Moray, died in 1346, his lands were divided between Agnes and her sister Isabella. Agnes and Patrick took the titles Earl and Countess of Moray, as Agnes had predicted, although as the couple were childless the title passed to Isabella’s descendants, including *Elizabeth Dunbar, after their deaths. ee • Amours, S. J. (ed.) (1903–14) The Original Chronicle of Andrew of Wyntoun, vi, pp. 80–91; The Chronicle of Lanercost [1913] (2001) H. Maxwell (trans.); Ewan, E. (2003) ‘Agnes of Dunbar’, in R. Pennington (ed.) Amazons to Fighter Pilots (Bibl.); Liber Pluscardensis (1877–80) F. J. H. Skene, ed.; ODNB (2004) (Dunbar, Patrick); RMS, i, nos 149, 265; SP; WoM. RANSFORD, Teresa Mary (Tessa), m1 Stiven, m2 Macdonald, OBE, born Mumbai 8 July 1938, died

Edinburgh 2 Sept. 2015. Founding director of the

Scottish Poetry Library, poet, cultural activist. Daughter of Lady Lucy Torfrida Ransford, housewife, and Sir Alister Ransford, Master of the Mint in Mumbai. Born in India, Tessa Ransford attended St Leonards School, St Andrews and studied German and philosophy at the University of Edinburgh, marrying Iain Kay Stiven, a Church of Scotland minister, in 1959. The couple had four children and lived in Pakistan (1960–8) before returning to Scotland. They later divorced. Tessa Ransford began publishing her poems in the 1970s, while working at the Netherbow Centre in Edinburgh. In 1981, she founded the School of Poets, a group meeting monthly to enable practising poets to support one another. In the following years, she founded, and determinedly gathered support for, the Scottish Poetry Library Association; the Library opened in Tweeddale Court, Edinburgh in Feb. 1984, with herself as Director and Tom Hubbard as Librarian, assisted by many committed volunteers. Her top-floor flat overlooking Holyrood Park provided much inspiration for her own poems, especially Shadows from the Greater Hill (1987). In 1988, she became the first woman editor of the poetry periodical Lines Review, a position she held until it closed (1998). The review was owned and run by Callum Macdonald (1912–99), whom she married in 1989. From the mid-1990s, Tessa Ransford oversaw the development of the new Poetry Library building, designed by Malcolm Fraser Architects, which opened to great acclaim in June 1999. She stood down as Director that year; an OBE followed (2000). Never one for cliques or favourites, all her projects, including the Library, aimed to build, engage and sustain an active and outward-looking community of poets. Few have done more for Scottish poetry. She initiated a poetry pamphlet award in 2001; worked as Royal Literary Fund Literary Fellow at the Centre for Human Ecology, and at Queen Margaret University (2001–8); and was President of Scottish PEN (2003–6). The Nightingale Question (2004) presents her translations of five poets from the former East Germany, while Not Just Moonshine (2008) offers a generous selection of her own poems, written over four decades. KJC • Ransford, T., Works as above, and see www.wisdomfield. com/biograph.html; The Herald, 2 Sept 2015; The Scotsman, 28 Sept. 2015 (obit.); www.scottishpoetrylibrary.co.uk (biography and ­appreciations).

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REDPATH RAPHAEL, Sylvia, n. Daiches, born Sunderland 21 Feb. 1914, died Kingston upon Thames 6 Oct. 1996. Scholar and translator. Daughter of Flora Levin, and Rabbi Dr Salis Daiches. Sylvia Daiches moved to Edinburgh, aged five, when her father became rabbi of the city’s Hebrew Congregation. She would later hold the traditional male role of Warden at Westminster Synagogue. From an intellectually remarkable family, she excelled at George Watson’s and the University of Edinburgh, graduating with first-class honours in French (1936). She completed her Oxford BLitt in French philology in half the normal two years. The war prevented further research: her war service was at the Treasury in London, alongside another exceptional graduate, Iris Murdoch. Sylvia Daiches met the academic David Raphael at Oxford, and they married in 1942, going on to have two daughters. She gave up a promising post at UCL to accompany her husband to New Zealand. In Glasgow, where she was resident from 1949 to 1972, she was at first denied an established post at the university because of her married status, but was appointed during the 1960s. Although her initial interest was linguistics, Sylvia Raphael was also a lover of literature, and completed distinguished translations of works by Balzac (nearest to her heart, reissued by Penguin 2005), as well as by George Sand and Mme de Staël, mostly for OUP in the 1990s. The professional and personal esteem in which she was held can be gauged from her tombstone in Edinburgh’s Piershill Cemetery: ‘a fine scholar and an even finer person’. ed

• Daiches, D. (1975) Was: a pastime from time past, (1997) Two Worlds, (1997) ‘Sylvia Raphael’, Edinburgh Star, 26, Feb.; France P. (ed.) (2001) The Oxford Guide to Literature in English Translation; ODNB (2004) (Daiches, Salis); Raphael, D. (1997) ‘Tribute’, Westminster Synagogue Newsletter, Feb.; UNESCO, Index Translationum. Personal knowledge. Private information. READ, Katharine (Catherine), born Dundee 3 Feb. 1723, died 15 Dec. 1778, returning from India. Portraitist and pastellist. Daughter of Elizabeth Wedderburn, and Alexander Read, laird and merchant. Katharine Read has been described as the first professionally trained woman artist in Scotland (Macmillan 2000, p. 110). After training in Edinburgh, France and Italy, she was a successful portraitist in London for some 20 years. Her uncle, John Wedderburn, was executed for his part in the ’45 at about the time that she moved

to France to continue training under the pastellist De La Tour, and during her Italian stay, Katharine Read made use of some key figures surrounding the exiled Jacobite court in order to pursue her training and provide patronage. Unusually, she apparently undertook her ‘Grand Tour’ unaccompanied by a family member. Her example probably inspired a younger portraitist, Anne Forbes (1745–1840) of Edinburgh, grand-daughter of William Aikman, whose family financed her training in Italy, where she was taught by Gavin Hamilton: although she did not make her mark in London, she enjoyed later success in Edinburgh. Katharine Read did very well in the English capital, painting prominent figures, including both the Hanoverian royal family and the republican historian, Catherine Macaulay. In the 1770s, she exhibited at the RA. Patronage came from the Scottish nobility in London, and her bestknown portrait (now in Inveraray Castle) was of *Elizabeth Gunning, Duchess of Hamilton and Argyll; it was engraved many times. Remaining close to her family, she also painted several relatives. Having supported her niece Helena Beatson, later Lady Oakley, also a promising artist, she travelled with her to India, to pursue her own career and, successfully, to seek a husband for her niece. But Katharine Read suffered from ill health there, and died on the journey home. Most of her paintings, signed with the spelling ‘Katharine’, are privately owned. ll in • NLS: MSS, Acc. 3081: Forbes correspondence; unpub. MS: Torrance, D. R. (1985) ‘Katharine Read of Drumgeith’, in ‘The Reads of Auchenlick [etc.]’. Archer, M. (1979) India and British Portraiture 1770–1825; DWT; Gaze, D. (1997) Dictionary of Women Artists, ‘Katharine Read’ by D. Taylor, pp. 1143–5 and ‘Anne Forbes’, by K. Sloan, pp. 537–9; Ingamells, J. (1997) A Dictionary of British and Irish Travellers in Italy 1701–1800, pp. 804–5; Macmillan, D. (2000) Scottish Art 1460–2000; Manners, Lady V. (1931) ‘Catherine Read: the “English Rosalba” ’, The Connoisseur, 88, pp. 376–86, and two further articles ibid., (1932) 89, pp. 35–40, 171–8; Morgan, M. (2004), ‘Jacobitism and art after 1745: Katherine Read in Rome’, Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies 27 (2), pp. 233–44; ODNB (2004) (Read, Katharine; Forbes, Anne); Steuart, A. F. (1905) ‘Miss Catherine Read, Court Paintress’, Scot. Hist. Rev., 2, pp. 38–46. REDPATH, Anne, OBE, m. Michie, born Galashiels 29 March 1895, died Edinburgh 7 Jan. 1965. Artist. Daughter of Agnes Milne, and Thomas Brown Redpath, textile designer.

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Her family having moved to Hawick in 1901, Anne Redpath attended Hawick High School until 1913, receiving encouragement from the art master, John Gray. Her parents allowed her to enrol at ECA if she also attended Moray House to gain a teacher’s certificate, and she qualified as a primary school teacher in 1917. The following year, she received her Diploma in Drawing and Painting, a bursary, a year’s post-graduate study, and in 1919 a travelling scholarship. She journeyed through Belgium to Paris, and then to Florence and Siena, where she discovered Italian quattrocento painting. Returning to Scotland, in 1920 she married James Beattie Michie (1891–1958), an architect with the Imperial War Graves Commission. They settled in St Omer and she continued to paint and exhibit locally in northern France, where two sons were born: Alastair (1921) and Lindsay (1924). A third son, David, was born in 1928 in southern France. During this period, most of her creativity went into the children’s upbringing. The family returned to Hawick in 1934, following the bankruptcy of James Michie’s employer. He moved to London in search of work and thereafter the family drifted apart. Anne Redpath re-embarked on her career, working mostly on landscapes and still life subjects. She resumed exhibiting at the RSA in 1935 (having exhibited as a student in 1919). President of the SSWA (1944–7), she held her first solo exhibition in 1947 in Gordon Small’s gallery in Princes Street, Edinburgh. During the late 1940s she was a member of the Hanover Street Group, an informal grouping of artists who met to exchange ideas and encourage each other. In her still life paintings, Anne Redpath employed the miscellanea of objects collected over a lifetime. Calling up such varied references as Bonnard, Matisse and Islamic miniatures, her work is both highly decorative and personal, for example The Indian Rug (1940s SNGMA). After two painting trips to Skye in the 1940s, she started to travel seriously in the 1950s. These journeys were pivotal in the inspiration for her art. She travelled to Spain via Paris and Collioure (1951) and visited Brittany (1953), Corsica (1954), the Canary Islands (1959) and Portugal (1961). The visual impact of stark living conditions, extreme climates, regional architecture and, in Portugal especially, of the intensely ornate gold altarpieces is reflected in her work. Her early pastel palette intensified to one of strident colours and strong contrasts, and her brushwork reflected the energy of her response to the landscape.

From the 1950s, Anne Redpath became a central figure in the art scene in Scotland, and her home at 7 London Street, Edinburgh (now marked with a plaque) was an important artists’ meeting place. She won formal recognition through her election as associate (1947) and later academician (1952) of the RSA. Between 1950 and 1963, she had five one-woman exhibitions in the Scottish Gallery, and gradually acquired recognition in England (OBE 1955, ARA 1960). Her work is held in many collections, including the RSA and SNGMA. j o s • Bourne, P. (1989) Anne Redpath 1895–1965; Bruce, G. (1974) Anne Redpath; Dickson, T. E. (1960) ‘Anne Redpath’, The Studio, March, vol. 159, no. 803; Hartley, K. (ed.) (1989) Scottish Art since 1900; Long, P. (1996) Anne Redpath 1895–1965 (catalogue); McCullough, F. (1963) ‘Anne Redpath’, Scot. Art Rev., IX, 2; MSW; Mullaly, T. (1965) Introduction to catalogue Anne Redpath – Memorial Exhibition, Edinburgh; ODNB (2004); Westwater, R. H. (1955) ‘Anne Redpath’, Scot. Art Rev., V, 3. REDPATH, Jean,‡ MBE, born

Edinburgh, 28 April 1937, died Arizona, USA 21 Aug. 2014. Singer of Scots song. Daughter of Isabelle (Bluebell) Dall, and James Redpath, driving instructor. Jean Redpath grew up in Leven in Fife, in a musical environment: her mother and other relatives sang Scots songs and her father played the hammer dulcimer. Having enrolled at the University of Edinburgh in 1956, she encountered Hamish Henderson of the School of Scottish Studies (SSS), a major influence on her. At the University Folk Song Society, she also met musicians and singers – Scots and Gaelic – involved in the Folk Song Revival. Henderson recorded Jean and her family in 1960; probably the earliest recordings of her singing, these are in the SSS archives (and on Tobar an Dualchais website). In 1961, Jean Redpath left Scotland for the USA. In New York’s Greenwich Village she met Folk Revival musicians, including Bob Dylan, and joined the US folk scene, singing at clubs and festivals. By the 1980s she was dividing her time between Scotland and America, and performing on the international circuit. With her versatile contralto voice, her repertoire ranged widely, but its mainstay was undoubtedly Scots song, of which she had profound knowledge. Her passion for the songs and real empathy with the subject matter was coupled with an engaging and lively stage manner. Performances typically included anecdotes and humour, her strong Fife identity to the fore.

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A major long-term project was on the songs of Robert Burns, with the American composer Serge Hovey, who researched and set tunes that Burns had intended for the words. The project was never completed – Hovey had Lou Gehrig’s disease, as recorded in Timothy Neat‘s documentary (1986)  – but the songs that did come to fruition appeared on seven albums, reissued in 1996.   Jean Redpath’s recorded output further totals some forty commercial albums, including songs by *Lady Nairne and featuring a variety of musicians and arrangements. Her many honours include an MBE (1987), honorary doctorates from Stirling, St Andrews and Glasgow universities and the RSAMD, and a portrait now in the SNPG by Alexander Fraser (1997). Long associated with Stirling University summer school, Jean Redpath was concerned to pass on her songs to younger singers. One of her last engagements was as Traditional Artist in Residence, the University of Edinburgh (2011), when she was again recorded for the Archives. KMC • Redpath, J. (2018) Giving Voice to Traditional Songs: Jean Redpath’s autobiography, 1937–2014, as told to Mark Brownrigg; ‘Jean Redpath – the songs of Robert Burns’ (vols 1–7), sung by Jean Redpath, researched and arranged by Serge Hovey (Greentrax Recordings, 1996); ‘Will ye no come back again: the songs of Lady Nairne’, sung by Jean Redpath with Abby Newton (Greentax Recordings, 2009).  Documentary film by Timothy Neat (1986): The Tree of Liberty – the Songs of Robert Burns sung by Jean Redpath, Researched and Arranged by Serge Hovey; The Scotsman, 14 Aug. 2014 (obit.); Tobar an Dualchais website: www.tobaran​ dualchais.co.uk

born Gravesend 29 July 1922, died Glasgow 28 Sept. 1982. Missionary and interfaith worker. Daughter of Jane Reekie and Arthur Reekie. Educated in Gravesend, Stella Reekie trained as a nursery nurse in Golders Green. She joined the Red Cross in 1943, which took her to Belgium and to the horrors of Belsen in 1945, where she worked to rehabilitate Jewish children. Later she worked in the children’s ward of the Red Cross TB hospital in Bad Rehburg. Back in Britain in 1949, she joined the Church of Scotland, in 1951 becoming a missionary in Karachi in Pakistan, where she spent 17 years. Returning from Pakistan to Scotland in 1968, she helped run a support group for refugees from Central Europe. In 1969, she was appointed by the Church of Scotland to work with Asian immigrant women in Glasgow, developing ways of meeting REEKIE, Stella Jane,

their needs and those of young people through cooperative projects and educational programmes. She supported a health clinic for immigrant children and established a permanent summer project for them. She also served on the Glasgow Community Relations Council. In 1972, an ‘International Flat’ was established where Stella Reekie lived and opened the doors to all. Her work included setting up a Sharing of Faiths Group that provided a forum for Muslims, Buddhists, Sikhs, Hindus, Jews, Christians, Baha’is and others to work together. The continuing growth of the inter-faith movement in Scotland is due in no small measure to the vision of Stella Reekie, who dedicated her life to establishing tolerance and understanding across ethnic and religious divides. mbs • Adamson, J., Ramsay, K., and Craig, M. (1984) Stella: the story of Stella Jane Reekie, 1922–1982. REID, Marion, n. Kirkland,

born Glasgow 25 March 1815, died Shepherd’s Bush, London 9 March 1902. Author. Daughter of Janet Finlay, and James Kirkland, Glasgow merchant. On 7 January 1839, Marion Kirkland married Hugo Reid (1809–72), a progressive educationalist, in Edinburgh. In June 1840, as the only Scotswoman present at the World Anti-Slavery Convention in London, she watched as a group of American woman delegates were refused the right to participate, after a lengthy debate, and met their leader, Lucretia Mott. Influenced by this debate, Marion Reid’s Plea for Woman (1843) was probably the first work in Britain or the USA to give priority to achieving civil and political rights for women, and was particularly influential in the USA in the first years of the women’s suffrage movement (Ferguson 1988). Aware of an earlier radical tradition, Marion Reid, like Mary Wollstonecraft, cited Talleyrand in indicating that the democratic principles of the French Revolution had not yet been applied to half the human race (ibid., p. 22). While women’s responsibilities might remain primarily domestic, she argued, this did not unfit them for civil and political rights, which would ‘ennoble and elevate the mind’ (ibid., p. 24). Exercising rights would enable women’s interests to be represented, and their grievances redressed. Such grievances included the laws oppressing married women, and the failure to provide girls with a good education, not as future wives and mothers but for their own fulfilment. Marion Reid’s arguments foreshadowed some of John Stuart Mill’s in his Subjection of  Woman

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(1869). In the only serious review of her work, *Christian Isobel Johnstone recognised the allusion to Wollstonecraft, but suggested that economic independence for women was an even higher priority than political rights. In the USA, the first edition was followed by three more (1847, 1851 and 1852) entitled Woman, Her Education and Influence, with an introduction by Caroline Kirkland (unrelated). After posts in Liverpool and Nottingham, Marion Reid’s husband became Principal of Dalhousie College, Halifax, Nova Scotia (1855–60) and she probably accompanied him there. The couple had one daughter. Much later, in 1888, the Finnish feminist Aleksandra Gripenberg recorded a meeting with her, recalling ‘how interested and fresh she was in all our questions, having watched their progress for many years’ (McFadden 1999, p. 21). JR • Reid, M., Works as above. Ferguson, S. (1988) ‘Foreword’ to Marion Reid, A Plea for Woman; Johnstone, C. I. (1844) ‘Mrs Hugo Reid’s Plea for Woman’, Tait’s Edinburgh Magazine, vol. 11. o.s, 15 n.s., pp. 423–8; Kirkland, C. (1852) ‘General Introduction’ to Mrs H. Reid, Woman, Her Education and Influence; McFadden, M. (1999) Golden Cables of Sympathy; Midgley, C. (1992) Women Against Slavery; ODNB (2004) (see Reid, Hugo); Stanton, E. C., Anthony, S. B. and Gage, M. J. (eds) (1881) History of Woman Suffrage, 6 vols; WSM; WSMBI. RENTON, Barbara

see QUAILE, Barbara (1906–1999)

RENTON, Dorothy Graham, n. Robertson, born Perth 7 April 1898, died Perth 28 Jan. 1966. Plantswoman. Daughter of Robina Conacher, and William Robertson, medical practitioner. Dorothy Robertson grew up in Edinburgh, where her regular visits to the Royal Botanic Garden widened her enthusiasm for and knowledge of plants. In 1922 she married John Taylor Renton (1891–1967), a chartered land agent. They purchased land from Orchardbank Nursery in Perth, built their house, Branklyn, and started to develop the garden. Forty years later it was described by Harold Fletcher, at that time Regius Keeper of the RBGE, as ‘the finest garden under two acres in Europe’ (RCHS Scottish Horticultural Medal 1960). Dorothy Renton was the plant expert, her husband the garden designer. They were influenced by the rock gardener Reginald Farrer and by Gertrude Jekyll but developed in their own style a unique garden of rock and scree features, peat walls and narrow winding paths, creating many microclimates. Dorothy Renton acquired an international reputation for

her skill in raising rare and difficult plants, many of which were new to science, particularly those from seeds collected from the Sino-Himalayan region. The Rentons were founder members of the Alpine Garden Society in 1929 and of the Scottish Rock Garden Club in 1933. Dorothy Renton’s expertise earned her many Awards of Merit from the RHS, including the Veitch Memorial Medal in 1954 for her work in introducing and cultivating rare plant species. She also received medals from the Scottish Rock Garden Club, the Alpine Garden Society and, in 1960, the RCHS Gold Medal. In 1962, the Rentons were jointly awarded the Lyttel Trophy, the Alpine Garden Society’s highest award. Dorothy Renton was involved with the Red Cross for 30 years until her retirement in 1962, becoming President of the Perth Division during the Second World War. She was awarded the voluntary long service medal, to which a Clasp was added in 1957. Since they had no children, Branklyn was bequeathed to the NTS in 1967. bm • Alpine Garden Society Bulletin, 1966, 34 (2) (obit.); Fletcher, H. R. (1969) The Story of the Royal Horticultural Society, 1804–1968, p. 521; Hellyer, A. G. L. ‘A living tapestry created’, Country Life, 12 August 1976, pp. 406–7; Mitchell, R. J. (1992) Branklyn Garden, NTS Guidebook; Perthshire Advertiser, 29 Jan. 1966 (obit.); eODNB; ‘Scottish horticultural medal awards’, RCHS Yearbook, 1960, pp. 47–9; Roper, L. ‘A plant lover’s paradise’, Country Life, 2 June 1966; Scottish Rock Garden Club, Journal, 1966 (obit.). REOCH, Elspeth, died

Kirkwall, Orkney 1616. Visionary accused of witchcraft. Daughter of Donald Reoch, piper to the Earl of Caithness. Elspeth Reoch grew up in Caithness but at age 12 went to live with an aunt in Lochaber. There she had the first of several visionary encounters and gained powers of divination. Two years later she went to Balvenie where she had an illegitimate child. This brought on further traumatic visions. She experienced sex with an otherworldly visitor and lost the power of speech – but this apparently catatonic mutism gave her second sight. She travelled around, making a living telling fortunes. In Orkney in 1614 she became pregnant by Patrick Traill, a follower of Robert Stewart, son of the imprisoned Earl of Orkney. During Stewart’s uprising, she had a vision of him and Traill with ropes around their necks. After the uprising’s defeat, probably still in her teens, she was executed for witchcraft. JG

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RIACH • Goodare, J. (2015) ‘Visionaries and nature spirits in Scotland’, in B. Mosia (ed.), Book of Scientific Works of the Conference of Belief Narrative Network of ISFNR, 1–4 October 2014, Zugdidi; Purkiss, D. (2001) ‘Sounds of silence: fairies and incest in Scottish witchcraft stories’, in S. Clark (ed.), Languages of Witchcraft. REYNOLDS, Doris Livesey, FRSE,

m. Holmes, born Manchester 1 July 1899, died Hove 10 Oct. 1985. Geologist, first woman FRSE. Daughter of Louisa Livesey, and Alfred Reynolds, textile merchant. After obtaining first-class honours in geology (Bedford College London, 1920; DSc London 1937), Doris Reynolds established an international reputation as a brilliant, if unconventional, petrologist. On a field trip to Ardnamurchan, while teaching geology at University College London (1931–3), she met Arthur Holmes (1890–1965), Professor of Geology at the University of Durham. She was offered a lectureship at Durham where they worked closely together, generating considerable gossip. They married in 1939 after Arthur Holmes’ first wife died, moving in 1942 to Edinburgh, where he was appointed Regius Professor of Geology. He considered that the university was getting ‘two for the price of one’, for Doris Reynolds was never given a salaried post at Edinburgh. As an Honorary Research Fellow, she made a huge contribution to that department over 20 years, lecturing, supervising PhD students and researching ‘her hobby’ (Hawkes unpub.). In the 1940s, Doris Reynolds developed the theory of ‘granitisation’ to explain the origin of granites: fluids migrating upwards through the Earth’s crust soaked into overlying rocks, chemically turning them into granite (Reynolds 1946). A feature of this theory was the ‘basic front’, a halo of dark minerals around the altered rock (Reynolds 1947a). Norman Bowen, leader of the opposing hypothesis – that granites evolved from basalts – described her theory as a basic af front (Lewis 2000, p. 212). The ensuing ‘Granite Controversy’ (Reynolds 1947b) dominated petrological research for two decades. Although her granitisation theory eventually proved incorrect, her work had the merit both of provoking research – ‘erecting wickets to be bowled at’ as Arthur Holmes put it – and of drawing attention to the role of fluids within the Earth’s crust, the importance of which was recognised only later. She was the first woman FRSE (1949) and was awarded the GSL Lyell medal (1960). As with her work, she was controversial in her relationships, polarising people into loving or

hating her. After Arthur Holmes died in 1965, she revised his famous textbook Holmes’ Principles of Physical Geology (1978), bought a car and learnt to drive. clel • Royal Holloway Univ. of London Archives: Papers of Dr Doris Reynolds, PP21; (see PP21/6, 4 August 1943, for Hawkes, unpub). Reynolds, D. L. (1946) ‘The sequence of chemical changes leading to granitisation’, Geol. Soc. of London Q. J., 102, pp. 389–446, (1947a) ‘The association of basic “fronts” with granitization’, Science Progress, 35, pp. 205–19, (1947b) ‘The granite controversy’, Geol. Mag. 84, pp. 209–23, (1950) ‘The geology of Slieve Cullion, Foughill and Carrickcarnan’, Trans. RSE, LXII, 1, 4, pp. 85–143, (1954) ‘Fluidization as a geological process, and its bearing on the problem of intrusive granites’, Amer. Jour. Science, 252, pp. 577–614. Black, G. P. (1986) ‘Dr D. L. Reynolds (1899–1985)’, Geol. Soc. [of London] Annual Report, 32–3 (obit.); Burek, C. and Higgs, B. (eds) (2007) The Role of Women in the History of Geology; Lewis, C. (2000) The Dating Game ; ODNB (2004) (see Holmes, Arthur).

born Motherwell 6 April 1927, died Monte Carlo 15 Sept. 1947. Champion swimmer. Daughter of Agnes Nicol White, teacher, and Charles Fraser Riach, police inspector. Nancy Riach was the most famous of a long line of stars from the Motherwell Amateur Swimming and Water Polo Club of the 1930s and 1940s, coached by David Crabb. The club’s other national swimmers included Cathie Gibson and *Margaret Bolton (see Margaret Jarvie) (the latter Nancy’s friend from Dalziel High School in Motherwell). One of only five women to appear in the first 50 Scottish athletes in the 2002 Scottish Sports Hall of Fame, Nancy Riach held 28 Scottish and British swimming records – freestyle, breaststroke and backstroke – by the time she was 17. From a devout home, she, like Scottish sprinter Eric Liddell, refused to compete on Sundays. Her career was cut tragically short at the age of 20: in Monte Carlo for the European Championships of 1947 with the British swimming team, preparing for the 1948 Olympics, she contracted polio and died before her parents reached the hospital. On her death, she was hailed by the chairman of the UN Swimming Committee as ‘the finest swimmer that the British Empire had ever produced’ and the ‘finest ambassador of sport that Scotland or any other country within the British Empire had ever turned out’ (Hamilton Advertiser 1947). Scotland

RIACH, Nancy Anderson Long,

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mourned her when she was buried at Airdrie. The Nancy Riach Memorial Award remains one of the most coveted annual awards in Scottish swimming. gj • Glasgow Herald, 15 Sept. 1947; Hamilton Advertiser, 20 Sept. 1947; ODNB (2004); Walker, G. (1994) ‘Nancy Riach and the Motherwell Swimming Phenomenon’, in G. Jarvie and G. Walker, Scottish Sport in the Making of the Nation, pp. 142–54. RITA

see Humphreys, Elizabeth (1850–1938)

RITCHIE, Marjorie, n. Fordyce,

born Edinburgh 29 March 1948, died Edinburgh 25 March 2015. Animal scientist, surgeon and member of the team which produced ‘Dolly the sheep’ in 1996. Daughter of Helen Moodie, and James Fordyce, wine merchant. Marjorie Fordyce joined the Animal Breeding Research Organisation, the predecessor of the Roslin Institute, University of Edinburgh, as a temporary job before teacher training college in 1966, but soon realised that this was the career for her. She began work in the wool technology laboratory there but later joined the Farm Animal Department. She rose through the ranks to become a senior scientific officer in charge of the Large Animal Unit, looking after the design and running of animal experiments and carrying out vital surgery required to produce ‘Dolly the sheep’. She was dedicated to science and to the health and welfare of the animals in her care. Her publications include articles in prestigious scientific journals such as Science, Nature Biotechnology and the Veterinary Record. She enjoyed mentoring the many students and visiting scientists involved in the animal experiments under her control and had friends and colleagues in laboratories all over the world. She married Bill Ritchie, an anaesthetist and later embryologist and member of the ‘Dolly team’, in 1988. In the late 1990s she was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, a disease which robbed her of her work with animals and led to her joining the quality-management team at Roslin, where she continued to work until her death. There is a photograph of her in the SNPG collection, and the University of Edinburgh honoured her fifty years of service by flying flags at half-mast on the day of her funeral. WR

• The University of Edinburgh staff newsletter (online), 9 Oct. 2015; The Scotsman, 11 April 2015 (obit.). Personal knowledge.

CBE, born Greenock 2 Jan. 1885, died Edinburgh 8 July 1980. Career administrator and civil servant. Daughter of Agnes Jane Catto, and John Fletcher Ritson, railway agent. Educated at Greenock Academy and in Germany, Muriel Ritson was a social worker and rent collector for the Glasgow Workman’s Dwellings Company (1908–11). As secretary of the WFS and Honorary Treasurer of the GWCA, she became familiar with health insurance work. Having been on several committees dealing with public health during the First World War, she joined the Commission of Investigation which visited France, in connection with the WAAF (Glasgow Herald, 1919). By the time of her appointment in 1919 as the only woman member of the six-strong Scottish Board of Health, which administered and directed Scottish health policy (1919– 28), Muriel Ritson was prominently associated with social work in Glasgow. In 1929 she moved to the new Department of Health for Scotland as Assistant Secretary and later Controller of Health and Pensions Insurance, until 1945. For the year before her retirement in 1946, she was Scottish Controller of the Ministry of National Insurance. She sat on the Ryan Committee (Health Insurance) and the Committee on Admission of Women to the Diplomatic and Consular Service. Undoubtedly her most high-profile appointment, however, was as Scottish representative on the Beveridge Committee (Social Insurance and Allied Services, 1941–2). She was awarded the CBE in 1936. jlmj RITSON, Muriel,

• Glasgow Herald, 17 July 1919 p. 6; Jenkinson, J. (2002) Scotland’s Health 1919–1948; WWW, vol. 7 (1980). Private information: Muriel Ritson’s surviving relatives in Australia. ROBERTS, Jean Barr McDonald, n. Weir, DBE, born Glasgow, 20 Dec. 1895, died Glasgow, 26 March 1988. Glasgow town councillor, 1929–66; first woman Lord Provost, Glasgow, 1960–3. Daughter of Mary Nevin, and Walter Weir, railway engine fitter. Jean Weir was born and brought up in the Springburn district of Glasgow, an industrial community famous for the manufacture of railway locomotives. She was educated locally, at Albert School, and then at Whitehill School in Dennistoun. Between 1914 and 1916 she was a student at Glasgow’s Dundas Vale Teacher Training College, thereafter teaching at Bishop Street Elementary School and for a time in a special school for children with disabilities. She left the

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profession in 1922 when she married Cameron Roberts (1889–1964), a mathematics teacher and later headmaster. The couple had one daughter. Jean Roberts, having grown up in a socialist family, was, along with her husband, an active member of the ILP. In 1929, she was encouraged to stand as a Glasgow Corporation councillor for Kingston, a docklands district immediately to the south of the River Clyde. Her educational expertise helped to win the ward for Labour, as schooling was one of the responsibilities absorbed by the Corporation under local government reorganisation in 1929. Although Glasgow then had the largest municipal administration in the United Kingdom outside London, she was only the tenth female councillor elected since 1920 and the sixth to represent Labour. The party gained municipal control in Glasgow for the first time in November 1933, and Jean Roberts rose to prominence in assorted positions, becoming Senior Magistrate in 1936. From 1952, she was the first woman to serve as City Treasurer and then, from 1955, as Labour Group leader. Jean Roberts had been nominated as a candidate for Lord Provost, Scottish equivalent of Lord Mayor, as early as 1949, but was not successful until 1960. She was aware that she had broken centuries of convention to become the city’s first female civic leader, but was still determined to embrace the ermine-robed ceremonial attached to the post. Her shrewd blend of traditionalism and progress meant that during her three years of office she became well known and widely respected. Yet it is revealing that it took her 31 years to achieve Glasgow’s chief municipal honour. Her status as a woman Lord Provost also remained unique in Scottish local government until the 1980s. Jean Roberts was made DBE in 1962 and served as Chairman of Cumbernauld Development Corporation between 1965 and 1972. iem • Univ. of Glasgow Archives, Acc. 44/32, Senate Orations File, Dame Jean Roberts (1977). Glasgow Evening News, 27 April 1933; Glasgow Evening Times, 4 May, 6 May 1960; Glasgow Herald, 5 May, 7 May 1960, 18 May 1962, 11 August 1964, 23 June 1977; *ODNB (2004); Sinclair, K. ‘Passing of a piece of history’, Glasgow Herald, 29 March 1988 (Appreciation); WWW 1981–90 (1991). ROBERTSON, Anne Strachan, FRSE, born Glasgow 3 May 1910, died Glasgow 4 Oct. 1997. Archaeologist, numismatist, museum curator. Daughter of Margaret Purden and John Anderson Robertson, teachers.

Anne Robertson was brought up in Glasgow, one of four sisters, and studied Classics at the University of Glasgow and archaeology at the University of London. From the early 1930s, frequent scholarships enabled her to participate in Mortimer Wheeler’s excavations, to work at the British Museum and to produce specialist numismatic publications. At a time when there were few professional, let alone female, archaeologists, she excavated Roman military sites on the Antonine Wall and worked at the Hunterian Museum, producing a series of important reports spanning 40 years, including a scholarly catalogue of the Roman Imperial coins in the Hunter Coin Cabinet (1962–82). She was appointed Under-Keeper of the Hunterian Museum and Curator of the Hunter Coin Cabinet in 1952. Continuing a tradition of meticulous and detailed scholarship inherited from George Macdonald and other pioneers, Anne Robertson became a doughty, if formal, doyenne of Roman studies. Among many professional distinctions, she received the Medal of the Royal Numismatic Society (RNS), the Huntington Medal and the Dalrymple lectureship. She was also FRSE, FMA, FRNS, FSA and FSAScot. She showed her enthusiasm for public participation in archaeology by her long involvement with Glasgow Archaeological Society and the Scottish Field School of Archaeology. She became Professor of Roman Archaeology, one of the first women to be given professorial rank at the University of Glasgow, in 1974, a year before her retirement. mamc • Robertson, A. S., Selected publications: (1960) The Antonine Wall (5th edn. 2001), (1961–82) Catalogue of Roman Imperial Coins in the Hunter Coin Cabinet, vols 1–5, (1961) Sylloge of Anglo-Saxon Coins in the Hunter Coin Cabinet (British Academy), (2002) Romano-British Coin Hoards. The Herald, 11 Oct. 1997 (obit.); The Independent, 15 Nov. 1997; Keppie, L. J. F. (1997) ‘Obituary, Anne S. Robertson’, Proc. Soc. Antiquaries Scot., 127, pp. xiii–xvii.

n. Saunders, born Kinghorn, Fife, 17 Dec. 1796, died St Petersburg 30 April 1854. Painter at Russian court. Daughter of a coach painter. Christina Saunders seems to have been encouraged to paint by her uncle, artist George Sa(u) nders (1774–1846). Working from his address in London, she quickly made a name for painting portraits, cabinet pictures and miniatures. In 1823, she married James Robertson, artist, and they had four surviving children. In 1828, she moved to her own studio in Argyle Street and exhibited r­ egularly ROBERTSON, Christina,

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at the RA (1823–44). Her distinguished sitters included the Drummond-Burrells, the Marchioness of Lothian, the Duke and Duchess of Buccleuch, the Duke and Duchess of Northumberland and the de Rothschilds. Although one critic relegated her to the ‘little boudoir school’ (Bird et al. 1996, p. 41), her reputation was sufficiently established by 1829 for the RSA to elect her as the first woman honorary member. She painted several fashionable Russian ladies and their children in Paris (1837), and commissions from the Tsar’s family and other Russian Europhiles followed. Christina Robertson was resourceful, as well as sharp-tongued and ­hump-backed, according to some reports (SNPG: Scottish file). She travelled to Russia (1839–40), to occupy rooms in the Peterhof Palace in St Petersburg. She was made honorary member of the Imperial Academy of Arts in 1841 for her royal portraits, and made regular visits to the city, having a studio on Nevsky Prospect in 1849. A watercolour portrait of her friend the artist Vladimir Ivanovich Gau (1816–95) survives in the State Russian Museum there, as does a pencil portrait of Christina by her daughter Mary (1846). Christina Robertson, whose husband predeceased her, died in St Petersburg and was buried in the Volkov Cemetery (1854). Her capacity to paint to order has left prolific evidence of the pre-Revolutionary Russian aristocracy in the State Hermitage Museum and several other Russian museums (Stavropol, Omsk, Alupka, Simferopol, Tashkent, Voronezh, Moscow). Neglected after her death, her modern reputation was boosted by an exhibition in Edinburgh and St Petersburg in 1996. ra • SNPG: Scottish File 5, also Christina Robertson, ‘Three Unknown Children’ c. 1830–5, SNPG 3267; V & A: Account Book and Self-Portrait. Bird, A. (1977) ‘A painter of Russian aristocracy’, Country Life, 6 Jan., pp. 32–3; Bird, A. et al. (1996) Christina Robertson: a Scottish portraitist at the Russian court, exhibition catalogue; ODNB (2004); Pomeroy, J. et al. (2003) ‘An imperial collection: women artists from the State Hermitage Museum’. ROBERTSON, Edith Anne, n. Stewart, born Glasgow 10 Jan. 1883, died Glasgow 31 Jan. 1973. Poet, biographer, dramatist. Daughter of Jane Louisa Faulds, and Robert Stewart, civil engineer. Edith Anne Stewart was educated at Glasgow High School for Girls and in London and Germany. In 1919 she married the Rev. Professor James Alexander Robertson; they had three daughters. She was a member of PEN and a keen walker and gardener. In the foreword to her Collected

Ballads and Poems (1967) the writer and critic Douglas Young celebrates the religious qualities of her poetry and praises her use of Scots. ‘[The poems] bring the reader constantly into touch with an exceptionally rich personality, of the finest sensibility, and with an atmosphere of poetic ­timelessness, truly that of the great old Scots ballads’ (Robertson 1967, p. [i]). It is, paradoxically, in her translations of Gerard Manley Hopkins’s poems into Scots that Edith Anne Robertson is most original: here, her religious sense, which was never narrowly sectarian, could reveal itself, as could her sensitivity to the possibilities of Scots: ‘In God’s guid time, in God’s guid kennin. Heaven’s smile/’s nae wry smile, – cud be shy smile – sae skies gangrel gait/Foilzies mirk bens – lichtens a loesome mile.’ (‘Til My Ain Hert,’ MSWP, pp. 39–40). She also wrote biography and drama, including an unpublished play (in NLS) celebrating the piety, courage and resilient femininity of *Lady Janet Douglas, burned at the stake in 1537. DAM c M • UAL: Personal papers and manuscripts, AUL MS 3406/ 1/1–14, MS 2794; NLS: MSS 26977–26984, corr. and literary papers. Robertson, E. A., Works as above, and see Bibl. MSWP (Bibl.). ROBERTSON, Hannah, n. Swan, born 2 Oct. 1724, died Edinburgh in or after 1807. Autobiographer, writer on fancy work and cookery. Daughter of Anne Huntingdon of Carlisle, and a Mr Swan, allegedly the illegitimate son of Charles II. In her picaresque autobiography (1791), Robertson recounted a comfortable childhood. On her mother’s remarriage, for her own amusement she acquired skills in embroidery, drawing and flower-making. She married Robert Robertson on 21 October 1749 in Perth. After his financial failure, in c. 1754, she was appointed to manage the New Inn in Aberdeen. She succeeded in discharging his debts, took pride in her work, and taught domestic skills to ‘young ladies’. She left in 1763, after fires and ‘oppressions’ (Robertson 1791, p. 23), including a long-running battle with the council, forced her to return to Perth to teach school. In 1766 she published the first edition of The Young Ladies’ School of Arts, dedicated to the Countess of Fyfe, instructing servants and young ladies, ‘especially young women who have no fortunes, or may be left in low circumstances’ (Robertson 1766, p. xxiii) in cookery and a variety of skills and accomplishments. In the expanded edition of 1767,

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she appealed to ‘Scots Ladies’ (Robertson 1767, p. xii) to redress their backwardness in housekeeping in the spirit of improvement. After her husband’s death in 1771 she taught school in Edinburgh and York; published further editions; and in 1782, with her daughter, opened a shop in Grosvenor Square, London. After successive family disasters she published the history of her life, helped by subscriptions from patrons. Back in Edinburgh c. 1794, she sought to support her grandchildren by teaching, flower-making and from the sales of her books; Lord Buchan recorded that, having survived her husband and nine children, ‘an object of great commiseration’ she was in February 1807 living in poverty, with failing eyesight, in East Lochend Close, Canongate. JR

ity and abortion in cattle caused by infection by Trichomonas foetus. During the Second World War, working again on gas gangrene, she made significant contributions to the understanding of its causative agents. In 1947, two years after the first two women Fellows were elected, she became the first Scottish woman FRS. She retired to the family home in Limavady, while maintaining an academic presence. With ‘the bearing and outlook of an Edwardian gentlewoman’ (Bishop and Miles, p. 340), she could be critical and ruthless in scientific discussion, though was always sympathetic to collaborators and pupils. JR

• Robertson, H. (1766, 1767, 1776) The Young Ladies’ School of Arts, (1791) The Life of Mrs Robertson (A Tale of Truth as well as of Sorrow), (1806) The Ladies’ School of Arts . . . . Likewise a Narrative of the Author’s Life, Addressed to a Friend, NLS copy H.17.e.19, with MS note by Lord Buchan, February 10 1807. Simonton, D. (2013) ‘Negotiating the economy of the eighteenth-century Scottish town’, in WECS. ROBERTSON, Muriel,‡ FRS, born Glasgow 8 April 1883, died Londonderry 14 June 1973. Protozoologist, bacteriologist. Daughter of Elizabeth Ritter, from Limavady, Co. Londonderry, and Robert Robertson, engineer. Muriel Robertson studied for an arts degree at the University of Glasgow, where her MA (1905) included zoology and botany. Her first research was on the life cycles of protozoa. In 1907, receiving a Carnegie Fellowship, she spent a year in Ceylon studying the blood parasites of reptiles, especially trypanosomes (parasitic protozoa). In 1909 she moved to the Lister Institute in London. The Colonial Office, interested in reducing the serious levels of sleeping sickness caused by trypanosomes, appointed her as Protozoologist to the Protectorate of Uganda, where, stationed in a laboratory near Lake Victoria Nyanza, she learned Luganda and how to shoot crocodiles. She published five papers which established the life cycle of Trypanosoma gambiense, in blood and in its insect vector, the tsetse fly, the most important paper appearing in 1913 in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. Returning to the Lister Institute, during the First World War she investigated the bacterial causes of gas gangrene. After 1918 she took up again her work with protozoa, and in the 1930s began a successful collaboration with W. R. Kerr on infertil-

• Robertson, M. (1913), ‘Notes on the life-history of Trypanosoma gambiense, with a brief reference to the cycles of Trypanosoma nanum and Trypanosoma precorum in Glossina palpalis’, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, 203, pp. 161–84. Bishop, A. and Miles, A. (1974) ‘Muriel Robertson, 1883–1973’, Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society, 20, pp. 316–47 (Bibl.); Miles, A.A. (1976) Journal of General Microbiology, 95, pp. 1–8 (obit.); (1963) ‘The 80th birthday of Muriel Robertson’, Journal of General Microbiology, 33, p. 175; ODNB (2004). ROBERTSON, Regina Christina (Jeannie), n. Stewart, MBE, born 17 April 1908, died Aberdeen 13 March 1975. Traditional singer. Daughter of Maria Stewart, hawker, and Donald Robertson, pedlar; husband and wife according to the customs of the travelling people. Jeannie Robertson eloped in 1927 with Donald Higgins (1907–71), whose widowed father had married her elder sister. Such complex relationship patterns were not rare among the travelling people, who wintered in towns but took to the roads in spring, the men working with metal or with animals, the women, like Jeannie’s mother, typically hawking goods. As seasonal labourers, picking berries and lifting potatoes, in their camps they shared fiddle and pipe music and songs handed down from ancient tradition. Donald Higgins was a fine piper. Jeannie Robertson’s daughter, Lizzie Higgins (1929–93) became an outstanding singer in her own right. But her mother, who learnt her songs from her own mother, Maria, was by common consent the finest traditional singer discovered through the Scottish Folk Song Revival of the 1950s. She always sang unaccompanied, eschewing instrumental backing. Hamish Henderson, of the then recently founded School of Scottish Studies at the

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University of Edinburgh, was in 1953 in quest of traditional singers. Travelling people directed him to Jeannie Robertson’s house in Aberdeen’s Gallowgate. Through Henderson, and the portable tape recorder, this retiring middle-aged housewife was heard on the BBC Scottish Home Service, and invited to sing in the Edinburgh International Festival. Jeannie Robertson toured the clubs which burgeoned in the Scottish Folk Song Revival and travelled as far as London, but declined invitations to the USSR and USA. Fees from concerts and LPs – not much – provided comforts for her ailing husband. In 1968, she became the first traveller to receive an honour (MBE) from the monarch. Her repertoire included bawdy and lyrical songs as well as great traditional ballads. Her version of the ancient ‘My Son David’ had enormous tragic power. With her dark eyes, raven hair and sharp mind, she maintained her dignity in any company, so that her auditors provisionally had to believe, as she did, that every word she sang in her ballads was true history. alrc

general secretary Gavin Laird persuaded the union to create a National Women’s Officer, she was elected to this post, in which she worked untiringly for women’s rights, including training and better pay, urging women to develop their skills and chairing AEEU conferences in 1999 and 2000. She helped further such policies as the minimum wage and all-women shortlists. Health and safety in hazardous industries and the problems of stress were particular concerns of hers, based on her own observations at work. As one of Britain’s leading woman trade unionists, Maureen Rooney held a number of prominent posts inside and outside the union movement, sitting on the advisory National Women’s Commission and attending the UN’s 4th World Conference on Women (Beijing 1995). ‘She was warm, practical, popular, humorous, committed and highly effective’ (The Herald, 2003). She was awarded OBE (1996) and CBE shortly before her early death from cancer. AH/SR • Amicus (2004) A Celebration of the life of Maureen Rooney CBE; The Guardian, 9 May 2003, The Herald, 9 May 2003, The Independent, 26 May 2003 (obits).

• Tapes held in the School of Scottish Studies, Univ. of Edinburgh. Henderson, H. (1992) Alias McAlias; Munro, A. (2nd edn. 1998) The Democratic Muse, Folk Music Revival in Scotland; ODNB (2004) (see Robertson, Christina Jane); Porter, J. and Gower, H. (1995) Jeannie Robertson: emergent singer, transformative voice. ROBINSON, Annot

(1874–1925)

m. Rose, born Kilravock Castle, Nairnshire, 8 March 1747, died Kilravock 1 Nov. 1815. Diarist and letter-writer, clan chief. Daughter of Elizabeth Clephane, and Hugh Rose of Kilravock. Educated at home, Elizabeth Rose read widely in English and Scottish literature, and corresponded with her uncle, Dr John Clephane, friend of David Hume, and her cousin, the novelist Henry Mackenzie. On 19 June 1779, she married Captain Hugh Rose of Brea, MD, who died the following year. In 1782, on the death of her brother Hugh, 18th Baron of Kilravock, she succeeded to the title, finally confirmed by the House of Lords in April 1787; her only child, Hugh, succeeded her. Her extensive journals and commonplace books of extracts, kept intermittently from 1771 to her death, offer an opportunity to study the activities, reading and self-representations of a landed gentlewoman close to several leading Enlightenment figures, including Henry Mackenzie, Lord Kames and James Beattie. She was a literary confidante of Mackenzie, although they did not always agree on the position of women: ‘You are hard on me for my idea of inferiority in your sex’, he wrote in 1771 (Drescher 1967, pp. 67–8). Elizabeth Rose’s reading included religious and devotional literature, works on education, conduct, travel, history and moral philosophy, poetry, plays and novels. She saw that

ROSE, Elizabeth, of Kilravock,

see WILKIE, Annot

ROONEY, Mary Gowran (Maureen), n. Cunningham, OBE, CBE, born 27 April 1947, Blantyre, died London 2 May 2003. Trade unionist. Daughter of Mary Conroy, and James Cunningham, coal ­stripper. Maureen Cunningham attended Elmwood Convent School. Coming from a Catholic family, she knew from experience that ‘discrimination was real and had to be faced every day’ (Amicus 2004). She left her first job, in hairdressing, to marry Phil Rooney in 1966 and they had four children. In 1974 she began working as a machine operator in the Hoover factory at Cambuslang, and served on the mid-Lanarkshire district committee of the Amalgamated Engineering Union (AEU, later AAEU, then Amicus, now in UNITE). Maureen Rooney became an accomplished speaker, holding her own in a male-dominated union and being elected to the Labour Party National Executive. During the 1980s, she was an active member of the STUC’s Women’s Committee. When, in 1990, the AEU

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reading and her extracts as part of a programme of conservative moral education, drawing upon her interpretation of Enlightenment writers and directed towards her son and grand-daughters. JR

Cooke, P., MacLeod, M. and Baoill, C. Ó. (2016) Original Highland Airs Collected at Raasay in 1812 by Elizabeth Jane Ross; Losty, J. P. (1989) ‘Sir Charles D’Oyly’s lithographic press and his Indian assistants’, in P. Rohatgi and P. Godrej (eds) India: a pageant of prints.

• NRS: GD1/726, GD125: Elizabeth Rose, corr., journals, and reading lists. Drescher, H. W. (1967) Henry Mackenzie. Letters to Elizabeth Rose of Kilravock. On Literature, Events and People; Moran, M. C. (1999) ‘From rudeness to refinement: gender, genre and Scottish enlightenment discourse’, DPhil, Johns Hopkins University; Towsey, M. R. M. (2007) ‘“An Infant Son to Truth Engage”: virtue, responsibility and self-improvement in the reading of Elizabeth Rose of Kilravock, 1747–1815’, Journal of the Edinburgh Bibliographical Society, 2, pp. 69–92, (2011) ‘“Observe her Heedfully”: Elizabeth Rose on women writers’, Women’s Writing, 18, 1, pp. 15–33.

ROSS, Katharine see COLLACE, Katharine

(c. 1635–97)

ROSS, Elizabeth Jane, m. D’Oyly, born Perth 17 Sept. 1789, died Steepleton Iwerne, Dorset, 1 June 1875. Collector of Gaelic music, poet, artist. Daughter of Isabella Rose MacLeod, and Capt. Thomas Ross, Royal Artillery. Elizabeth Ross’s mother was daughter to the 11th Laird of Raasay; Elizabeth, known as Eliza, was raised on Raasay following her parents’ deaths in 1794. She attended Mary Erskine School in Edinburgh, marrying in 1815 Charles D’Oyly Bt. (1781–1845) at Cawnpore. The couple resided in India until 1838, founding a lithographic press and the ‘Behar School of Athens’, a society of artists. Sketches of Eliza D’Oyly by her husband and artist George Chinnery depict her holding books or playing the harp or piano; many of her own artworks also survive. Following Charles’s death she settled in Dorset, also maintaining her Highland heritage. In 1875 she published Òrain Ghaidhlig, four poems of which were included posthumously in An t-Òranaiche, a popular anthology of Gaelic verse. Its editors refer to her most significant legacy, a manuscript of Gaelic songs collected c. 1813, as a unique representation of the ‘wideranging musical repertory known to [the Gaels of Raasay]’ in the early nineteenth century (Cooke et al. 2016, p. 11). KLM

• School of Scottish Studies Archives: MS 3 www.ed.ac.uk/ files/imports/fileManager/ERossfacsimilesm.pdf BL: India Office Select Materials P1819–1845 and WD4118 (sketches). Baintighearna D’Oyly (1875) Òrain Ghaidhlig; [Ross, Elizabeth] (n.d.) Oran do rarsa, duthaich Mhic Ghille Challum, le Ealasaid Ross; ‘Mac-Na-Ceàrdach, Gilleasbuig’ [Archibald Sinclair] (1879) An t-Òranaiche/ The Gaelic ­songster.

ROSS, Marion Amelia Spence, FRSE, born Edinburgh 9 April 1903, died Dunfermline 3 Jan. 1994. Physicist. Daughter of Marion Amelia Spence Thomson, and William Baird Ross, organist and music teacher. Marion Ross graduated with honours in mathematics and natural philosophy from the University of Edinburgh. After teacher training, she taught mathematics for two years in Surrey. In 1928, she was appointed to Assistant Lecturer posts in the Physics and Music Departments at Edinburgh, where she pioneered a new course in acoustics, still a part of the BMus course. She followed her own line of investigation, using techniques of X-ray diffraction, with experimental work done in Manchester during the vacations, in collaboration with Sir Lawrence Bragg. She gained her PhD in 1943, under Charles Barkla, a Nobel Prize winner. Her first major paper was on crystal structure, published with Arnold Beevers, on determinations using Fourier methods and the new Patterson method; important examples were the alums, copper sulfate pentahydrate, and b-alumina, NaAl11O17. Originally studied as a troublesome impurity in Al2O3 production, it is now an important solid-state ionic conductor, and two sites in the structure are known as Beevers-Ross and antiBeevers-Ross sites. During the Second World War, Marion Ross taught mathematics in Falkirk Technical School then spent four years with the Admiralty in Rosyth, working on underwater acoustics, fluid flows and hydrodynamics, becoming Head of the Research Group. At the end of the war, invited to return to the University of Edinburgh as a lecturer, she set up a laboratory to study highenergy physics using emulsions, which produced major results on the calibration of emulsions. In 1965, she established the Fluid Dynamics Unit and as its first director made important findings in the stability of boundary layers, retiring as an emeritus reader. She was elected FRSE and on her retirement a prize was founded to honour her name. ncb

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ROTHIEMAY • The Scotsman, 13 Jan. 1994 (obit.); www.royalsoced.org.uk/ cms/files/fellows/obits_alpha/ross_marion.pdf www.cpa.ed.ac.uk/bulletinarchive/1993–1994/06/ obituaries.html; www.ph.ed.ac.uk/fluids/Homepage.html; www.ecanews.org/beev.htm ROTHIEMAY, Katherine, Lady Lady Rothiemay (c. 1583–52) ROUGH, Alison, born

see FORBES, Katherine,

c. 1480, died Edinburgh 3 Sept. 1535. Merchant and property-holder. Executed for homicide. By 1507, Alison Rough had married Jasper Mayne, an Edinburgh notary, merchant, and urban property-holder, active in royal service. Jasper Mayne died at the Battle of Flodden in 1513, leaving his widow to provide for the family’s future. Alison Rough was involved in numerous legal disputes over her properties, unpaid merchant debts and other affairs, making her more publicly visible than most contemporary women. Marriage to Thomas Lauriston ended in divorce c. 1517. In 1528, she secured her son John’s marriage to the wealthy widow Margaret Martin. When her son Adam became a priest, Alison Rough combined his lands with a substantial cash dowry for her daughter, Katherine Mayne (c. 1513–c. 1565), attracting the twice-widowed but well-connected Edinburgh burgess Alexander Cant. Alison Rough moved into the home of her daughter and son-in-law after their marriage in late 1531. In 1533, Alexander Cant, angered by delays in the dowry payments, sued his wife and motherin-law. On 31 August 1535, a property Katherine Mayne had brought to the marriage was lost in a court case. That night, tempers flared and Alexander Cant was killed by his mother-inlaw and wife. Mother and daughter were condemned to death; Katherine Mayne’s pregnancy delayed her execution. After the birth, she fled to England, married the Protestant exile Alexander Allan (Alesius), and moved to Germany. Alison Rough was executed by drowning on 3 September 1535. A six-year legal struggle ensued as the town and the king fought over her forfeited goods. Alison Rough’s story was told in an exhibition (2003–17) in The Real Mary King’s Close, which lies underneath Edinburgh City Chambers. Mary King (fl. 1616–44) married a local merchant, Thomas Nimmo, in 1616. Widowed in 1629, Mary and her four children moved before 1635 to what had been known as Alexander King’s Close, where she rented a house along with a shop on the High

Street. Her testament, dated September 1644, shows that she was a successful tailor and cloth merchant. EE • Edinburgh City Archives: Inventory of Charters; NRS: CS 5,6, Court of Session Records; CH 5/3/1, Act Book of Archdeaconry of Lothian; B22/1/5–7, Protocol Book of Vincent Strathauchin. Ewan, E. (2003) ‘A woman’s life in late medieval Edinburgh’, Women’s History Magazine, 45; Continuum Group (2003) The Real Mary King’s Close Official Guide; Thomson, T. (ed.) (1833) A Diurnal of Remarkable Occurents; Wood, M., Macleod W. and Durkan, J. (eds) (1930–85) Protocol Book of John Foular, 4 vols. ROYDS, Mabel Alington, m. Lumsden, born Little Barford, Beds., 3 April 1874, died Edinburgh 22 Nov. 1941. Artist-printmaker. Daughter of Hester Frances Alington, and the Rev. Nathanael Royds, Anglican parson. Mabel Royds was fifth of 11 children. She found the progressive Slade School of Art (1892–7), where women could attend life classes, preferable to art training at the RA Schools, despite the offer of a scholarship. She went to Paris (c. 1898–1906), befriended Walter Sickert, and supplemented an allowance with graphic design work. She taught briefly in Toronto (1906–7) before becoming a design tutor at ECA. In 1913, she married Ernest Lumsden (1883–1948), etching tutor, and on the outbreak of war travelled to India, initially joining her sister. When their baby daughter required urgent medical treatment, Mabel Royds and Ernest Lumsden returned to Edinburgh, where Mabel resumed her life as artist and printmaker. Among her best works are prints of Indian and Nepalese subjects (1920s, Aberdeen Art Gallery) and flower prints (1930s, SNGMA). She painted a mural for St Mary’s Church, Hamilton, and taught intermittently at ECA where her daughter was a student (1930–3). She exhibited with the RSA and the SSA. ra

• Unpub. MS (family ownership): Barton, M. (1989) ‘Mabel Royds by her Daughter’; ECA Archives: Letter Books and Prospectuses 1907 ff. Furst, H. (1924) The Modern Woodcut ; Lawrie, S. (1996) ‘Edinburgh College of Art 1904–1969: a study in institutional history’, PhD, ECA/HW; Salaman, M. C. (1919) ‘Modern British woodcuts and lithographs by British and French artists’, The Studio Special Edition, (1927) The Woodcut of Today at Home and Abroad; Somerville, E. and Ross, M. (1920) Stray-Aways. RUDDICK, Edith, m. Brill, born Dunfermline 2 March 1918, died Glasgow 12 July 1996. Theatre,

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television, film and radio actor. Daughter of Rachel Nankin, and Jacob Ruddick, draper. Edith Ruddick was the youngest of seven children of Jewish parents who fled from Russia in 1901. She began her acting career at Dunfermline High School and, after contacting John Gielgud who auditioned her, won a scholarship to RADA. She graduated in 1938 and soon after the start of the Second World War was asked to join a ­semi-professional company based in St Andrews, which later became famous as the Byre Theatre. She joined the innovative Unity Theatre in Glasgow and from 1942 worked with BBC Radio, writing scripts, plays and sketches as well as broadcasting. In 1948, she took part in David Lyndsay’s The Thrie Estaitis at the Edinburgh Festival. Other ground-breaking work included a 1969 performance of Romeo and Juliet with teenagers from Easterhouse as Montagues and Capulets. In 1941, she married Jack Brill (1909–92), musician, actor and, later, clothing manufacturer in Glasgow, and they had two sons. Her work also included teaching speech and drama and a series of television acting roles, but problems with her eyesight led her to work in a Citizens’ Rights office, which provided a source of inspiration for her writing and introduced her to the Playback Service for blind people. She recorded many books and newspapers for this service. Her last major role was in Local Hero, the 1983 Bill Forsyth film, and her last television role, shortly before she died, was in an episode of Dr Finlay’s Casebook. lk • Ruddick, E. (1995) My Mother’s Daughter. Private information. RUSHFORTH, Margaret Winifred, n. Bartholomew, OBE, born Duntarvie, West Lothian, 21 August 1885, died Edinburgh, 29 August 1983. Medical practitioner, psychoanalytic therapist, pioneer of therapeutic group work. Daughter of Agnes Bartholomew, and John Bartholomew, farmer. The middle child of five, Winifred Bartholomew was educated at Edinburgh Ladies’ College, after which she studied medicine at Edinburgh, graduating MBChB in 1908. After a year in general practice in Dundee, she travelled to India as a medical missionary and lived and worked in India for 20 years. Within a year of her arrival in India she met her future husband, Frank Victor Rushforth (d. 1945), a financial expert working for the Imperial Finance Service. They married in Bombay in 1915 and had four children. Her interest in psychology and psychoanalysis

was stimulated in part by her work with groups of mothers of young children in Calcutta. In 1929, she embarked on a year’s psychoanalytic training at the Tavistock Clinic in London. The following year, her husband retired from his work in India and they moved to Edinburgh. After undergoing two years of personal analysis, she established her own psychoanalytic therapy practice in Edinburgh. In 1939, she founded the Davidson Clinic, which provided psychoanalytically informed family therapy, child psychotherapy and adult psychotherapy for 34 years. The clinic remained independent of the NHS; patients paid fees according to their means and many paid no fee at all. The clinic ran annual summer schools and other educational events, attended by a wide range of professionals, through which its ideas were communicated. Religion and spirituality were central to her life and work. She always valued the Christian tradition into which she was born and she was also powerfully drawn to eastern religious traditions, including Sufism and Buddhism, which helped to underpin her holistic understanding of body, mind and spirit. She was a pioneering figure in the human potential and creative group movements. In the early 1970s, she was instrumental and inspirational in the creation of an alternative community at the Salisbury Centre in Edinburgh. In 1978, five years after the closure of the Davidson Clinic, her daughter Diana Bates (1918–98), doctor and psychotherapist, established with colleagues a new therapy centre in Edinburgh, Wellspring, which embodies a distinctive growth-oriented ethos bequeathed at least in part by Winifred Rushforth herself. ‘The Dreamer’, a sculpture by Chris Hall sited in George Square Gardens, Edinburgh, is dedicated to her. lb • Rushforth, W. (1984) Ten Decades of Happenings. For other works see Bibl. University of Edinburgh Special Collections: Winifred Rushforth Papers, Coll-1260. Miller, G. (2015) ‘Winifred Rushforth and the Davidson Clinic for Medical Psychotherapy: a case-study in the overlap of psychotherapy, Christianity and New Age spirituality’, History of Psychiatry, 26, 3, pp. 303–17 (Bibl.). RUSSELL, Jessie, born Barony, Glasgow 15 April 1850, died Marton, New Zealand 2 July 1923. Poet, dressmaker. Daughter of Mary Patton, and David Laing, cork-cutter. Orphaned at an early age, Jessie Russell was raised in Torthorwald, Dumfriesshire, by her

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maternal grandparents. Her mother had hoped Jessie would be a teacher, but on the death of her grandfather she entered domestic service, aged 14. She learned dressmaking, married James Russell, a Clyde shipyard carpenter, in 1874, and spent her early adult life in Partick. Her poems appeared in the Glasgow Weekly Mail and other local newspapers, and were collected in The Blinkin’ o’ the Fire and other poems (1877). They show her to have been a fiery, moralistic poet, probably influenced by her Cameronian family. Her politics are always on the side of the worker and, in particular, of women. ‘Woman’s Rights versus Woman’s Wrongs’ (pp. 29–31) defends women ‘struggling for daily bread’ and condemns the physical violence they often face from men. Like *Janet Hamilton, she points out that women have far fewer rights than men: ‘Workmen’s wages have risen, but so has the price of bread,/While female work is so poorly paid, can women be clothed or fed?’. This poem provoked a response from *Marion Bernstein and, in her reply, ‘A Recantation’ (p. 31), Jessie Russell makes a plea for female suffrage. Her work, like that of Bernstein and Hamilton, is spirited and spiritual; she is particularly intriguing in her Scotslanguage poetry. In 1881, the Glasgow Weekly Mail reported that she had not written poetry for a few years due to ‘an increasing little family and the trials and vicissitudes of married life’ (cited Leonard 1990, p. 306). Around 1886 the family emigrated to New Zealand; in 1893 Jessie Russell signed the massive women’s suffrage petition which brought enfranchisement there later that year. VB • Russell, J. (1887), Works as above. Bold, V. (1997) ‘Beyond the “Empire of the Gentle Heart”: Scottish women poets of the nineteenth century’, in HSWW; (2007) James Hogg: a bard of nature’s making; Leonard, T. (ed.) (1990) Radical Renfrew; https://nzhistory.govt.nz/ politics/womens-suffrage/petition RUTHERFORD, Alison see COCKBURN, Alison

(1713–1794)

born early 1600s, died after 1633. Author of a spiritual autobiography. Mistress Rutherford’s family connections are uncertain, though she may have been a granddaughter of Thomas Foulis, Edinburgh goldsmith. Her date of death is unknown, although an Elizabeth Rutherford was banished from Edinburgh and Leith in 1674, along with the widows of covenanting leaders John Livingston and Robert Blair, for vehemence in the presbyterian cause.

RUTHERFORD, Mistress,

Everything known of Mistress Rutherford derives from her narrative (14,500 words), a copy of which exists only in the hand of the noted ecclesiastical historian Robert Wodrow. It describes her early life in and around Edinburgh, her spiritual development and presbyterian commitment, marriage (husband not named), migration to Ulster, relations with ministers (including Blair) and the death of her husband and first child (c. 1633). Her autobiography is one of the earliest examples of a genre that expanded rapidly during the Restoration and beyond. dm • Univ. of Edinburgh Library: Laing MSS, La.III.263, Wodrow Octavo 33, no. 6. Mullan, D. G. (1997) ‘Mistress Rutherford’s narrative: a Scottish puritan autobiography’, Bunyan Studies, 7, (2004) ‘Mistress Rutherford’s autobiography’, Scot. Hist. Soc. Misc. xiii.

died 1584. Estate manager and Protestant patron. Daughter of Janet Haliburton, and William Ruthven, 3rd Lord Ruthven. Katherine Ruthven was raised at Ruthven Castle (Huntingtower) near Perth and probably given a Protestant education alongside her five brothers and six sisters. In 1551, she married ‘Grey Colin’ Campbell, 6th Laird of Glenorchy (1499–1583) whose main base lay at Balloch Castle at the east end of Loch Tay, Perthshire. Katherine Ruthven was a supporter of the Protestant Reformation and patronised Protestant ministers. She played an important role in running the extensive Glenorchy estates stretching across the Central Highlands, and most probably understood and spoke Gaelic. She was well-known at the court of *Mary, Queen of Scots and was a close personal friend of William Maitland of Lethington, the Queen’s Secretary, and of leading royal advisers including the earls of Argyll, Morton, and Moray, and Moray’s wife, *Annas Keith. Unusually in the early modern period, some of her correspondents addressed her as ‘Kait’ or such affectionate titles as ‘luffing ant [aunt]’ (Dawson 1997, p.26). She was involved in all aspects of family strategy and business, taking a leading role in the marriage negotiations of her children, especially Duncan, her eldest son and heir. However, after he succeeded in 1583 the two were at loggerheads regarding the dower portion owed to her as a widow. Along with her husband, Katherine had re-established control over the family and, with their four surviving sons and

RUTHVEN, Katherine, Lady Glenorchy,

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four daughters, secured the lineage of the house of Glenorchy (later earls of Breadalbane). Katherine Ruthven’s lively and interesting personality shines through her correspondence, providing a fascinating glimpse into the world of a 16th-century ­noblewoman who moved easily between Highland and Lowland society. jead • NRS: GD112/39 Breadalbane Collection Correspondence. Breadalbane Letters, 1548–83: http://www.ed.ac.uk/divinity/ research/resources/breadalbane Dawson, J. (ed.) (1997) Clan Campbell Letters, 1559–83; Dawson, J. (1999) ‘Clan, kin and kirk: the Campbells and the Scottish Reformation’, in S. Amos et al. (eds) The Education of a Christian Society; Innes, C. (ed.) (1855) The Black Book of Taymouth.

c. 1504–53. Co-founder, Magdalen Hospital, Cowgate, Edinburgh, merchant. Janet Rynd was a member of a well-established family in pre-Reformation Edinburgh. RYND (or RHIND), Jonet (Janet),

By 1520, she had married Michael McQueen, burgess, merchant, and holder of various public offices, who founded the Magdalen Chapel in the 1530s. After he died (c. 1536), Janet Rynd oversaw the realisation of her husband’s original plans, and enlarged the institution by adding a hospital. Her Catholic civic piety is made clear through her involvement with the hospital. She was also a successful businesswoman, selling iron to James IV in 1540, and engaging in protracted but ultimately successful negotiations with the Hammermen’s Guild, giving them patronage of the Magdalen Chapel in exchange for residence in a house in Niddry’s Wynd. Janet Rynd’s tomb lies in the chapel, a rare survival for a woman of her class and time. mc • Lynch, M. (1981) Edinburgh and the Reformation; RMS, vol. 3; Smith, J. (ed.) (1906) The Hammermen of Edinburgh; TA, vol. 5, 7; Wood, M. (ed.) (1940–1) The Protocol Book of John Foular.

S n. McBain, born Aberdeen 4 June 1912, died Aberdeen 25 Dec. 2000. Mathematician and astronomer. Daughter of Isabella Webster, domestic servant, and John McBain, dairyman’s carter. Flora McBain graduated with honours in physics and mathematics from the University of Aberdeen in 1934. She held posts there from 1934 to 1937 as demonstrator in medical physics and then as lecturer in applied mathematics, while researching into radium sources for cancer treatment. With her professor, J. A. Carroll, she took part in a successful expedition to observe the total eclipse of the sun in Omsk, Siberia (19 June 1936). In 1937, despite being advised initially that‡ a woman had little chance, she was appointed to a post at the Nautical Almanac Office, becoming the first woman scientist to hold a senior post (eventually Principal Scientific Officer) at the Royal Observatory, Greenwich, of which the Nautical Almanac Office was part. In 1949, the Observatory moved from Greenwich to Herstmonceux in Sussex where she worked until her retirement in 1973. Apart from during the Second World War, when the Almanac Office carried out special tasks SADLER, Flora Munro,

for the Services, Flora McBain’s work involved the computation of astronomical and navigational tables, her special field being the motion of the moon and the prediction of eclipses of stars. Her work, entailing international collaboration in which she represented Britain, had wider significance in determining the variation in the rotation of the Earth and the establishment of time. The first editor of the Royal Astronomical Society’s professional journal, she was also the first woman secretary of that society, from 1949 to 1954, the year she married her colleague Donald H. Sadler ­(1908–87), Superintendent of the Nautical Almanac Office, in what was described as ‘the astronomical romance of the decade’. mtb • ODNB (2004) (Sadler, Donald); Tayler, R. J. (ed.) (1987) History of the Royal Astronomical Society, vol. 2, 1920–1980; Wilkins, G. A. (2001) ‘Flora Munro McBain 1912–2000’, Astronomy and Geophysics, 42.4, p. 34. Private information. ST CLAIR-ERSKINE, Lady Millicent Fanny, Duchess of Sutherland, m1 Sutherland-Leveson-Gower, m2 Fitzgerald, m3 Hawes, born Dysart House, Fife,

20 Oct. 1867, died Orriule, France, 20 August

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four daughters, secured the lineage of the house of Glenorchy (later earls of Breadalbane). Katherine Ruthven’s lively and interesting personality shines through her correspondence, providing a fascinating glimpse into the world of a 16th-century ­noblewoman who moved easily between Highland and Lowland society. jead • NRS: GD112/39 Breadalbane Collection Correspondence. Breadalbane Letters, 1548–83: http://www.ed.ac.uk/divinity/ research/resources/breadalbane Dawson, J. (ed.) (1997) Clan Campbell Letters, 1559–83; Dawson, J. (1999) ‘Clan, kin and kirk: the Campbells and the Scottish Reformation’, in S. Amos et al. (eds) The Education of a Christian Society; Innes, C. (ed.) (1855) The Black Book of Taymouth.

c. 1504–53. Co-founder, Magdalen Hospital, Cowgate, Edinburgh, merchant. Janet Rynd was a member of a well-established family in pre-Reformation Edinburgh. RYND (or RHIND), Jonet (Janet),

By 1520, she had married Michael McQueen, burgess, merchant, and holder of various public offices, who founded the Magdalen Chapel in the 1530s. After he died (c. 1536), Janet Rynd oversaw the realisation of her husband’s original plans, and enlarged the institution by adding a hospital. Her Catholic civic piety is made clear through her involvement with the hospital. She was also a successful businesswoman, selling iron to James IV in 1540, and engaging in protracted but ultimately successful negotiations with the Hammermen’s Guild, giving them patronage of the Magdalen Chapel in exchange for residence in a house in Niddry’s Wynd. Janet Rynd’s tomb lies in the chapel, a rare survival for a woman of her class and time. mc • Lynch, M. (1981) Edinburgh and the Reformation; RMS, vol. 3; Smith, J. (ed.) (1906) The Hammermen of Edinburgh; TA, vol. 5, 7; Wood, M. (ed.) (1940–1) The Protocol Book of John Foular.

S n. McBain, born Aberdeen 4 June 1912, died Aberdeen 25 Dec. 2000. Mathematician and astronomer. Daughter of Isabella Webster, domestic servant, and John McBain, dairyman’s carter. Flora McBain graduated with honours in physics and mathematics from the University of Aberdeen in 1934. She held posts there from 1934 to 1937 as demonstrator in medical physics and then as lecturer in applied mathematics, while researching into radium sources for cancer treatment. With her professor, J. A. Carroll, she took part in a successful expedition to observe the total eclipse of the sun in Omsk, Siberia (19 June 1936). In 1937, despite being advised initially that‡ a woman had little chance, she was appointed to a post at the Nautical Almanac Office, becoming the first woman scientist to hold a senior post (eventually Principal Scientific Officer) at the Royal Observatory, Greenwich, of which the Nautical Almanac Office was part. In 1949, the Observatory moved from Greenwich to Herstmonceux in Sussex where she worked until her retirement in 1973. Apart from during the Second World War, when the Almanac Office carried out special tasks SADLER, Flora Munro,

for the Services, Flora McBain’s work involved the computation of astronomical and navigational tables, her special field being the motion of the moon and the prediction of eclipses of stars. Her work, entailing international collaboration in which she represented Britain, had wider significance in determining the variation in the rotation of the Earth and the establishment of time. The first editor of the Royal Astronomical Society’s professional journal, she was also the first woman secretary of that society, from 1949 to 1954, the year she married her colleague Donald H. Sadler ­(1908–87), Superintendent of the Nautical Almanac Office, in what was described as ‘the astronomical romance of the decade’. mtb • ODNB (2004) (Sadler, Donald); Tayler, R. J. (ed.) (1987) History of the Royal Astronomical Society, vol. 2, 1920–1980; Wilkins, G. A. (2001) ‘Flora Munro McBain 1912–2000’, Astronomy and Geophysics, 42.4, p. 34. Private information. ST CLAIR-ERSKINE, Lady Millicent Fanny, Duchess of Sutherland, m1 Sutherland-Leveson-Gower, m2 Fitzgerald, m3 Hawes, born Dysart House, Fife,

20 Oct. 1867, died Orriule, France, 20 August

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1955. Social reformer, writer. Daughter of Blanche Adeliza Fitzroy, and Robert Francis, 4th Earl of Rosslyn. Married on 20 October 1884 to Cromartie Sutherland-Leveson-Gower (1851–1913), 4th Duke of Sutherland (from 1892), with whom she had four children, Millicent, Duchess of Sutherland was a well-travelled and renowned society hostess who took a close interest in the welfare of the people on her husband’s extensive estates and was responsible for several practical schemes. Her reconstitution of the Sutherland Home Industries in 1886 led to her Presidency of the Scottish Home Industries Association (later Highland Home Industries). She founded the Sutherland Benefit Nursing Association, Sutherland Technical School, and Sutherland Gaelic Association. Her Staffordshire initiatives, particularly in the Potteries, earned her the sobriquet ‘Meddlesome Millie’. She established and ran a hospital unit, the Millicent Sutherland Ambulance (1914–18), for which she was awarded the French Croix de Guerre and Belgian Royal Red Cross. Subsequently she lived in France. She wrote widely. The novel That Fool of a Woman (1925) reflects her experiences from marriages to Percy Desmond Fitzgerald in 1914 (dissolved 1919) and George Ernest Hawes in 1919 (dissolved 1925). mb-j • St Clair-Erskine, M., Works as above and, as Stafford, Marchioness of (1889) How I Spent My Twentieth Year, being a Short Record of a Tour Round the World, 1886–7, as Sutherland, Millicent (1899) One Hour and the Next, (1902) The Winds of the World, (1914) Six Weeks at War. See also Bibl. below. Beaton, E. (1991) ‘The Sutherland Technical School: pioneer education for crofters’ sons’, Rev. of Scot. Culture, 7; ODNB (2004) (see Gower, Millicent Fanny SutherandLeveson); Stuart, D. (1982) Dear Duchess: Millicent Duchess of Sutherland 1867–1955 (Bibl.). SAMPSON, Agnes, died Edinburgh 28 Jan. 1591. Midwife and healer. One of the North Berwick witches. Agnes Sampson lived at Nether Keith near Haddington. A widow, middle-aged or older, she was accused of being part of a witches’conspiracy to kill James VI. This launched a major witchhunting panic. Popular accounts of her rely on the sensationalised pamphlet Newes from Scotland (1591); her confessions and trial records give a fuller picture. Her medical practice was extensive, including clients from the common folk and lairds’ wives in East Lothian and Midlothian.

Her reported cures had a large magical element, including curing diseases induced by fairies and witches. She apparently took one man’s witchinduced illness on herself and tried to transfer it to a dog or cat, but it landed on another man who died. She used a prayer in divination (a metrical version of the Apostles’ Creed, learned from her father): if she halted once when reciting it, the person was bewitched, if twice, they would die. The Haddington church presbytery suspected Agnes Sampson of witchcraft in 1589. In November 1590 a story of treasonable witchcraft broke in nearby Tranent, and she was arrested. After being tortured, her head squeezed in a twisted rope, and searched intimately for the devil’s mark, she ‘immediately confessed whatsoever was demanded of her’ (Normand and Roberts 2000, p. 314). On 4/5 December she made a series of confessions, some before the King, at Holyroodhouse. These included raising storms to prevent the voyage of James’s Queen, *Anna of Denmark, to Scotland in 1589, a Hallowe’en witches’convention at North Berwick, and a plot to bewitch the King by using toad’s venom on some of his linen. This last line of investigation was dropped, perhaps because it might incriminate the wrong people. According to Newes she convinced James of the genuineness of the witches’conspiracy by recounting his conversation with his wife on their wedding night. This is not recorded in her confessions, and since parts of Newes are clearly fictionalised it need not be taken literally. Further confessions in January 1591 helped incriminate higher-status witches whom the investigation was now targeting – Barbara Napier, *Euphame MacCalzean and (through them) the Earl of Bothwell. Having served her purpose, Agnes Sampson was tried and convicted of witchcraft on 27 January 1591, and next day died penitently, strangled and burned at the Castle Hill in Edinburgh. jg • Normand, L. and Roberts, G. (eds) (2000) Witchcraft in Early Modern Scotland: James VI’s Demonology and the North Berwick Witches; ODNB (2004) (North Berwick witches); Wormald, J. (2000) ‘The witches, the devil, and the king’, in T. Brotherstone and D. Ditchburn (eds) Freedom and Authority: Scotland, c. 1050–c. 1650. SAMPSON, Margery Fletcher,‡ born

Leith, 10 Aug. 1890, died Edinburgh 14 Jan. 1915. Bellringer and teacher. Daughter of Alexandrina Dobbie, and William Brook Sampson, Clerk.

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Bellringing was an exclusively male occupation in Scotland until 1907, when Margery Sampson joined the band of ringers at St Mary’s Cathedral in Edinburgh, where her father was ringing master. She rang her first peal two years later, at St Cuthbert’s Church in Edinburgh – the first peal rung by a woman in Scotland. After leaving school she studied at the Edinburgh School of Cookery then moved to Tamworth to work for Staffordshire County Council. While there she joined the St Martin’s Guild of Church Bellringers in Birmingham and later became a founding member of the Ladies’ Guild. She rang a total of twelve peals, becoming only the second woman in the world to ring a peal of Stedman Cinques (twelve bells) – a remarkable achievement for a young woman at that time. Following her two-year stay in Tamworth, she returned to Edinburgh to teach at the Cookery School, but died aged 24 early in 1915. Tribute peals were rung in several towers after her death and she was warmly remembered for her ‘whole-heartedness and enthusiasm which was an example to others’ (Ringing World, 29 Jan. 1915). BEA

• Aberdeen, Lord and Lady [Gordon, J. C. and Gordon, I. M.] (1929) More Cracks with ‘We Twa’, pp. 120–8; Mayo, I. F. ‘A village: a ballad: and a stone-dyke’, The Sun, 3 March 1890, pp. 414–16.

• The Ringing World, 22 Jan., 29 Jan., 5 Feb., 12 Feb., 5 March, 29 Oct. 1915; 28 Jan., 14 July 1916. SANDISON, Janet

(1910–76)

see CAMERON, Elizabeth Jane

n. Innes, born or baptised Alvah, Aberdeenshire, 3 August 1825, died Fyvie, 13 July 1888. Embroiderer. Daughter of May Gauld, and Robert Innes, mason crofter. May Innes went briefly to the local school before being sent out to herd cattle, and later went into service, subsequently marrying her employer’s coachman, Robert Sandison. They took a croft at Steinmanhill, near Fyvie. Despite a growing family, she also helped on the farm, once building 134 yards of stone dyke. Naturally artistic and entirely selftaught, she became famous locally for her beautiful art embroideries, many of them designed by herself, although her cottage chimney smoked so badly the door had to be left open for her to see to do the work. For *Lady Aberdeen, she completed an embroidery heirloom originally designed by Ann, Jacobite Countess of Aberdeen. *Queen Victoria was another customer. Work of May Sandison’s design was exhibited posthumously at the Chicago International Exhibition of 1893. Examples of her work are at Haddo House. lrm

SANDISON, May,

born Edinburgh 21 Feb. 1906, died Berkhamsted, Herts 7 Sept. 1964. Doctor and teacher. Daughter of Maggie S. Bowie, and Richard Akiwande Savage, doctor, African nationalist, newspaper editor. The daughter of a Nigerian student and a working-class Scotswoman, Agnes Savage was probably the first West African woman to qualify as a doctor. At the University of Edinburgh she was a high-achieving medical student. She qualified in 1929 with first-class marks in all her subjects and won the prestigious Whitman Prize in Clinical Medicine as well as the Dorothy Gilfillan Memorial Prize for best woman graduate. Her subsequent medical career was hampered by institutional barriers dictated by both race and sex. Nevertheless she persisted and played a key role in the early history of multiple Ghanaian institutions. After graduation she worked at Korle Bu Hospital, Kumasi, Gold Coast (modern Ghana), but was paid discriminatory ‘native’ wages and slept in the servants’ quarters. In 1931 she moved to the newly established Achimota College, Accra, Gold Coast. There she was employed as a teacher and doctor, importantly on a ‘European’ contract. Agnes returned to Korle Bu hospital in 1935, where she took charge of the infant welfare clinic and nurses’ training school. She was also an assistant medical officer in the maternity ward. As a concession, she now worked on the leave and passage terms of a ‘European’ doctor. Despite extensive correspondence, however, it was not until 1945 that the Colonial Office employed her on the same terms of service, salary and retirement as her white counterparts. She retired in 1947 to live in Berkhamsted, after a pioneering career fighting institutional racism and sexism. HM

SAVAGE, Agnes Yewande,

• Sherwood, M. (2014) ‘Two Pan-African political activists emanating from Edinburgh University: Drs John Randle and Richard Akiwande Savage’, in A. Adogame and A. Lawrence (eds) Africa in Scotland, Scotland in Africa; Keazor, E. (2014) 120 Great Nigerians. Private information: Mike Savage and Margaret Savage. SAWYER, Mairi Thyra, n. Mackenzie, m1 Hanbury, m2 Sawyer, born West Derby, 1 March 1879, died

Edinburgh 23 July 1953. Gardener. Daughter of

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Minna Amy Edwards Moss, and Osgood Hanbury Mackenzie, landowner. Mairi Mackenzie’s parents separated acrimoniously: accounts vary about whether and when she lived with her mother, but from an early age she doted on her father – the visionary landowner who from 1862 created Inverewe garden, Wester Ross. She came to share his love of gardening and field sports. History has painted her in his shadow, but Inverewe garden was her life’s work as much as his. It is to Mairi and her then husband, landowner Robert Hanbury ­(1867–1933), whom she married in 1907, that Scotland owes the garden’s survival and development after her father’s death in 1922. With Ronald Sawyer (d. 1945), a farmer and agricultural improver whom she married in 1935, she re-built Inverewe House on the site of her father’s mansion, ruined by fire in 1914. Mairi Sawyer was described as quiet, unassuming, retiring but also charming, and her ‘courteous reception of all her visitors added greatly to their enjoyment and appreciation of the property’ (Inverness Courier, July 1953). Her personal life was touched by tragedy: both her children died in infancy and both husbands predeceased her. Knowing her beloved garden faced an uncertain future, from 1950 she negotiated its transfer to the NTS, handing over management in May 1953. She died suddenly two months later of a heart attack – friends said of a broken heart – while convalescing from a routine eye operation. dd • NTS: Inverewe archives: Margaret Cuthbert, ‘Memories of Inverewe’, c. 1990; Dawn MacLeod, ‘Some random notes . . . Mairi Sawyer and Inverewe in her time’, 29 September 1988; other papers. Sawyer, M. (1949) Chapter on Inverewe Garden in Mackenzie, O. [1922] (1949) A Hundred Years in the Highlands, (1950) ‘Inverewe’, RHS Journal, 75, 11, pp. 436–44, (1953) Inverewe: an illustrated Guide to Inverewe Garden. Cowan, M. (1964) Inverewe: A Garden in the North West Highlands; Inverness Courier, 24 July 1953 (obit.); MacLeod, D. (1958) Oasis of the North, (1982) Down-to-Earth Women. SAXBY, Jessie Margaret, n. Edmondston,

born Halligarth, Unst, Shetland 30 June 1842, died Wulver’s Hool, Unst 27 Dec. 1940. Author and folklorist. Daughter of Eliza Macbrair, writer, and Laurence Edmondston, doctor. Jessie Edmondston received no formal education but was immersed in the literary and scientific atmosphere fostered by her parents.

Her mother, Eliza Macbrair (c. 1802–69), was the daughter of a Glasgow merchant and author of Sketches and Tales of the Shetland Islands (1856). In 1859, Jessie Edmonston married her father’s assistant, Henry Linckmyer Saxby (1836–73), with whom she had five sons, and a daughter who died young. The couple lived in Inveraray, Argyllshire until Henry’s death in 1873. Jessie then moved to Edinburgh, before returning to Unst in 1899. She was a prolific writer from an early age. Her first published work was Lichens from the Old Rock (1868) and she wrote poetry, prose, romantic fiction and dialect verse, much with a Shetland theme. Her prodigious output was necessary to support her family. As well as producing 47 books, she contributed to magazines and journals including The Boy’s Own Paper. Back in Unst, she immersed herself in Shetland folklore, publishing Shetland Traditional Lore (1932) aged 98. In her poetry and fiction, Jessie Saxby created a romantic, tragic-heroic image of Shetland womanhood: the stoic widow of the man lost at sea; the hardy crofter; the heroic survivor – an image encapsulated in the figure of Britta Inkster in ‘The Brother’s Sacrifice’ which appeared in the collection Daala-Mist: Or, Stories of Shetland (1876). On the other hand she was dismissive of the ‘false sentiment’ (Shetland Times, 27 May 1893) that surrounded the exploits of one of her contemporaries, *Betty Mouat, who survived a shipwreck that caused the death of the skipper leaving a widow and young family. It was they who more deserved public sympathy. In 1894 she was involved in a public controversy about the morals of Shetland women. In a letter to the Shetland Times (9 June), she intervened in a breach of promise case being heard in Lerwick sheriff court. The female complainant had asserted that it was customary for courting couples to sleep with one another before marriage. Jessie Saxby saw this as a gross attack on the morals of Shetland womanhood. ‘Why are Shetland men silent when the morality of their countrywomen is impugned by Scots?’, she inquired. ‘I assert that a purer and more lasting love has its home in Shetland than in any other part of “religious” Scotland’. Her reward was to be honoured as a ‘sister’ in a poem published anonymously in the Shetland Times (14 July). Addressed to her, the poem concluded: ‘Sister! For that one noble word/So promptly said, so bold and true,/ The women of your island race/For years to come will honour you.’

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A political liberal, Jessie Saxby was a temperance supporter and seemingly a supporter of women’s suffrage as she was mooted as President of the Shetland Women’s Suffrage Society, as well as a writer and advocate for Shetland. On her 90th birthday, admirers presented her with an illuminated address praising her for embodying ‘for thousands in every quarter of the world the very spirit of Shetland’. LCA • Shetland Archives D.11/135/2: (Bibl.). Saxby, J., Works as above and see Bibl. ODNB (2004); Shetland Times, 11 Jan. 1941 (obit.). SCÁTHACH (Scáthach of Skye) fl. (allegedly) c. 500 bc; AÍFE (Aífe of Alba) fl. (allegedly) c. 500 bc. Legendary warrior women of Alba. In the Middle Irish tale, ‘The Wooing of Emer’, the hero Cú Chulainn travels to Scáthach’s realm across the Irish Sea to obtain training in feats of arms from her. Scáthach lives in a fortress on an island (often identified as Skye in popular tradition) and trains the few young warriors who are strong enough and clever enough to penetrate her fortress. She teaches Cú Chulainn a variety of martial arts, and particularly instructs him in the use of the deadly gae bolga, a type of barbed spear that enters as a single point but expands and tears the flesh if removed. During his training, Cú Chulainn joins Scáthach and her army in battling the rival female chieftain of a neighbouring territory, Aífe. Cú Chulainn is granted the right to fight Aífe in single combat on Scáthach’s behalf. He overcomes Aífe through a combination of physical strength and trickery, and grants her mercy on three conditions: that she make peace with Scáthach; that she sleep with him, and that she bear him a son. She agrees, and a truce is negotiated between the two sides. Aífe becomes pregnant with Cú Chulainn’s son, and the hero leaves a ring and a name for him before he departs. Before the hero leaves Alba, Scáthach foretells Cú Chulainn’s future triumph in the great epic battle, the Táin (The Cattle Raid of Cooley). The hero’s son appears again in a related tale, ‘The Death of Aife’s Only Son’, in which the seven-year-old boy travels across the sea to Ireland to challenge the heroes there, refusing to reveal his identity. Cú Chulainn fights the boy and kills him with the gae bolga, thus slaying his only son, who laments ‘there is something Scáthach didn’t teach me’ (Kinsella 1970, p. 44). jaf

• Kinsella, T. (trans.) The Táin (1970) ‘The Wooing of Emer’ and ‘The Death of Aífe’s Only Son’.

born Lauriston, Edinburgh, c. 1737, died 1801. Diarist and travel writer. Daughter of Anne Rutherford, and Gideon Schaw. Little is known of Janet Schaw’s life, apart from what is revealed in her journal of her travel from Scotland to the Caribbean and North Carolina between 1774 and 1776. The journal, which was discovered in 1921, provides a detailed contemporary account of those places. She sailed from Burntisland, Fife, in October 1774 with her brother Alexander and the children of John Rutherford of North Carolina, who had been at school in Scotland. Her journal indicates her attitudes to contemporary issues: noticeably uncomfortable attending Anglican church services, she disapproved of the rebellious Americans and displayed unthinking racial prejudice, not unusual at the time, towards enslaved Africans. In the colonies, she encountered many Scotswomen, some on plantations, others running shops and farms. She also met old friends, some from leading Scottish aristocratic and mercantile families, which suggests that she was well-connected in Scotland. She probably lived in Edinburgh’s New Town, and her journal is her legacy. djh

SCHAW, Janet,

• Schaw, J. (1921–2005, various reprints) E. W. Andrews and C. M. Andrews (eds) Journal of a Lady of Quality, being the Narrative of a journey from Scotland to the West Indies, North Carolina and Portugal. Goodman, D. (2003) ‘Janet Schaw and the Complexions of Empire’, Eighteenth-Century Studies 36 (2) pp. 169–93.

fl. 1326–31. Customs collector. Marjory de Schireham was Scotland’s earliest recorded woman custumar, a collector of the king’s customs on certain exports. Marjory de Schireham and Alan de Balmossy were the custumars for Dundee from 1327 to 1331. Marjory was probably related to other Schirehams living in Dundee. She received a royal pension for six years from 1326, although the reason is unclear. No more female custumars are recorded until 1513, when *Margaret Crichton and others became custumars after their husbands’ deaths at the Battle of Flodden. EE

SCHIREHAM, Marjory de,

ER, vol. i. SCOT, Elizabeth n. Rutherford, born

Edinburgh 17 July 1729, died Edinburgh 1789. Poet. Daughter of Alice Watson, and David Rutherford of Capehope, advocate. Elizabeth Rutherford had, according to her family, written poetry from an early age. Educated

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in Latin, French and the belles-lettres, she reportedly composed her first stanzas aged 11. During her childhood she corresponded with poet, collector and playwright Allan Ramsay (1684–1758) and influential Enlightenment author Thomas Blacklock (1721–91), both of whom encouraged her poetic endeavours. Her aunt, *Alison Cockburn, was also a poet. Elizabeth Rutherford married Walter Scot of Wauchope in 1768 and settled near Jedburgh in the Scottish Borders. Here she became acquainted with the work of Robert Burns (1759–96), who was then achieving literary celebrity. In 1787 she composed a poetic epistle for Burns, which she entitled ‘The Guidwife of Wauchope-house to Robert Burns’. In it, she describes Burns as ‘My canty, witty, rhyming ploughman’, and doubts that he is an uneducated farmer: ‘I hafflins doubt, it is na’ true, man,/That ye between the stilts was bred,/Wi’ ploughman school’d, wi’ ploughman fed’. While admiring his poetry, she wishes that Burns would visit her, his company being more desirable than that of ‘dull lairds’, and offers him a ‘marled plaid’ to hold ‘your shoulders warm and braw’ (Leask 2015, 127–8). Burns replies with his ‘Answer’, assuring her that he is indeed a ploughman poet and expressing a nowcelebrated wish, ‘That I for poor auld Scotland’s sake/Some useful plan, or book could make,/Or sing a sang at least’ (Leask 2015, 128–30). Burns visited Elizabeth Rutherford Scot at Wauchope in 1787, where he described her as having ‘all the sense, taste, intrepidity of face, & bold, critical decision which usually distinguish female authors’ (Leask 2015, p. 118). Family members published a posthumous collection of her work, Alonzo and Cora, in 1801. RB • Leask, N. (ed.) (2015) The Oxford Edition of the Works of Robert Burns Volume I: commonplace books, tour journals, and miscellaneous prose. Scot, E., Work as above. ODNB (2004); Purdie, D., McCue, K. and Carruthers, G. (eds) (2013) Maurice Lindsay’s The Burns Encyclopedia; Ross Roy, G. and De Lancey Ferguson, J. (eds) (1985) The Letters of Robert Burns, vol. 2; ‘The Gude-Wife o’ Wauchope; and Memorabilia’, Tait’s Edinburgh Magazine 20.231 (1853), pp. 141–4.

fl. (allegedly) c. 500 BC. Legendary eponymous ancestor of the Scots. In early medieval usage, Latin Scoti could refer to Gaels from both Ireland and northern Britain. Conceived as the eponymous ancestor of these Scoti, and as an Egyptian whose descendants

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migrated to northern Britain, the earliest surviving text to mention Scota, daughter of Pharaoh (the antagonist of Moses), is the 9th-century Irish poem Can a mbunadus na nGáedel. This work is attributed in medieval sources to Máel Muru, the ‘chief poet of Ireland’ according to the annalist who recorded his death in 887; it is entirely possible that it was he who originated the character. A modified version of her story subsequently found its way into the 11th-century prose work Lebor Gabála Érenn, a reworking of early medieval traditions concerning the origins of the Irish. Thence a version of the story was incorporated into Scottish-origin legendry as it underwent extensive remodeling in the 12th and 13th centuries. It was typical of such pseudo-history, as an instrument of medieval political discourse, to undergo frequent amendment in the interests of relevance. Consequently, there are as many different versions of Scota’s story as there are texts that relate it. JEF Broun, D. (1999) The Irish Identity of the Kingdom of the Scots in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries; Lebor Gabála Érenn (1995) in The Celtic Heroic Age, Koch, J.T. (ed.), pp. 213–66; Scowcroft, R. M. (1987) ‘Leabhar Gabhála, Part I: The Growth of the Text’, in Ériu 38; Skene, W. F. (ed.) (1871) Johannis de Fordun Chronica Gentis Scottorum. SCOTT, Agnes Neill see MUIR, Wilhelmina Johnston (Willa) (1890–1970) SCOTT, Anna, Duchess of Buccleuch, suo jure, Duchess of Monmouth, born Dundee 11 Feb. 1651,

died London Feb. 1732. Heiress. Daughter of Margaret Leslie, and Francis Scott, 2nd Earl of Buccleuch. Anna Scott was born in Dundee, where her family, one of Scotland’s wealthiest, sought refuge from the English invasion. The family seat of Dalkeith was seized by the English after Earl Francis’ death in 1651. Margaret Leslie married David Earl of Wemyss in 1653 and raised Anna and her sister Mary, Countess of Buccleuch, in Wemyss Castle, Fife. Mary’s death in 1661 made Anna Countess of Buccleuch. Margaret Leslie proposed to Charles II that Anna marry his illegitimate son, James Crofts (1649–85), who took the surname Scott for their marriage on 20 April 1663. James became Duke of Monmouth, and Buccleuch a dukedom. In 1666 Anna was made Duchess of Buccleuch in her own right. The marriage was unhappy, with Monmouth consistently unfaithful and politically incompetent. When he fled to France in 1683, his wife p­ ublicly

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dissociated herself from his actions. In 1685, Monmouth raised an unsuccessful rebellion against James VII and II, proclaiming himself the rightful king. Duchess Anna voluntarily accompanied her children to the Tower. On Monmouth’s execution day, she secured a statement from him that he acted alone; this, and her friendship with the royal family, helped her preserve the Buccleuch inheritance. Anna Scott remained Duchess of Buccleuch for life, refusing to pass on the title before death to her son, as *Anne, Duchess of Hamilton had done. In 1688 she married Charles, 3rd Baron Cornwallis (1655–98). From 1701 she extensively rebuilt Dalkeith Castle (now Palace) as a home suitable for those of royal blood. She returned to London in 1714, but was buried in St Nicholas Church, Dalkeith. ee

1996, p. 5), and indeed her husbands and sons were all achievers. Kathleen Scott was well connected and talented. Her prolific sculpture, largely done between the wars, consists of figurative work: lifelike portrait busts of the eminent, and statues, mostly of male subjects. She was one of very few successful women sculptors of the mid20th century, but her resolute opposition to the modernist aesthetic has deprived her of art historians’ attention. With her ‘silhouette like carved granite’ (Lees-Milne 1996, p. 2) she was a striking, independent, though non-feminist figure, admired by many. sr • Musée Rodin, Paris: Corr. (as Kathleen Bruce). Kennet, K. (1949) Self-portrait of an Artist. Lees-Milne, J. (1996) Fourteen Friends; ODNB (2004); Stocker, M. (1999) ‘The tool’s trace; Kathleen Scott, sculptor of men’, unpub. conference paper, Sussex, (1999) ‘My masculine models: the sculpture of Kathleen Scott’, Apollo, 150, pp. 47–54; Young, L. (1995) A Great Task of Happiness: the life of Kathleen Scott.

• Fraser, W. (1878) The Scotts of Buccleuch; Lee, M. (1996) The Heiresses of Buccleuch; ODNB (2004); SP. SCOTT, Edith Agnes Kathleen (aka Lady Scott and Lady Kennet), n. Bruce, m1 Scott, m2 Young, later Kennet, born Lindrick, Notts., 27 March 1878, died

London 24 July 1947. Sculptor. Daughter of Jane Skene, and Lloyd Stewart Bruce, Anglican clergyman. Of Scottish descent, and the youngest of 11 children, Kathleen Bruce was orphaned at the age of eight, and sent to live with her great-uncle, historian William Forbes Skene (1809–92), in Edinburgh. Strictly reared in this bachelor household, she made up for it by determining to become a sculptor, training at the Slade, then from 1901 in Paris, at the Académie Colarossi. She later wrote, ‘to say that a lass perhaps not out of her teens had gone off prancing to Paris to study art was to say that she had gone irretrievably to hell’ (Kennet 1949, pp. 23–4). She had some tuition from Rodin and has left vivid descriptions of his studio. In 1903, she volunteered for relief work in Macedonia, later returning to Paris, then London, where she met the explorer Captain Robert Falcon Scott (1868–1912). They married in 1908 and had one son, the wildlife expert Peter Scott (1909–89). She learnt of Captain Scott’s death in the Antarctic on her arrival in New Zealand to meet him. Her bronze statue of him stands in Waterloo Place, central London. Kathleen Scott carried out war work, and in 1922 remarried, to politician Edward Hilton Young (1879–1960), later Baron Kennet. Their son, Wayland Young (b. 1923), became a journalist. ‘By far my highest ability has been that of a father chooser’, she later claimed (Lees-Milne

SCOTT, Isabella Mary, m. Gibson, born Edinburgh 1786, died Edinburgh 28 Nov. 1838. Harpist, composer, teacher. Daughter of William Scott, teacher, and his wife, and related to Sir Walter Scott. Isabella Scott, who in 1818 married Patrick Gibson, landscape painter, ran a boarding school for young ladies in Edinburgh and taught music. The composer Robert A. Smith, musical conductor of St George’s Church, Edinburgh, consulted her during the creation of his own works. In return, he published some of hers in his Scottish Minstrel series (6 vols 1821–4), including her most popular song, ‘Loch na Garr’ (1822) to a text by Lord Byron, arranged with symphonies and accompaniment for the harp or piano. Isabella Scott’s music was among the first to provide the (concert) harp, then fairly new to Scotland, with a Scottish repertoire. Her other arrangements for the harp or piano include ‘The Bouquet’ (1805), ‘Mount and go’ (1815), ‘O say that my Heart’s too small’ (1815), ‘Ye Banks and Braes of Bonnie Doon’ (1820), ‘Kenmure’s on and away’ (1820). She also composed hymns and sacred songs published in several collections. pac

• Brown, J. D. and Stratton, S. S. (1897) British Musical Biography; Cohen, A. I. (1987, 2nd edn.) International Encyclopedia of Women Composers; Garvey Jackson, B. (1994) Say Can you Deny me?; Hixon, D. L. and Hennessee, D. (1975) Women in Music; Johnson, D. (1972) Music and Society in Lowland Scotland in the Eighteenth Century; Rensch, R. (1989) Harps and Harpists.

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SCOTT SCOTT, Jean (Janet), Lady Ferniehurst, born Selkirkshire c. 1548, died Jedburgh after 1595. Factrix and Catholic intermediary. Daughter of Grisel Betoun of Creich, and Sir William Scott of Kirkurd. Jean Scott was a young child when in the early 1550s her father died and her grandfather, Sir Walter Scott of Buccleuch, was murdered in a bloodfeud with the Kers. A pawn in the manoeuvrings to pacify the feud, she was contracted to marry George Ker of Faldonside in 1565. The marriage did not occur, but in 1569 she became the second wife of Sir Thomas Ker of Ferniehurst (d. 1586). In 1577, she was paid 1,000 merks as compensation for the failure of the 1565 contract. Despite its bloody background, the marriage was a success, preventing Jean’s brother, Walter Scott of Buccleuch, from killing her husband. The couple’s daughter and three sons included Robert Ker, Earl of Somerset, a favourite of James VI. Lady Ferniehurst converted to Catholicism after 1569, becoming an important protector of Catholic priests. She proved an able factrix of her husband’s estates during his political exile from 1573 for supporting *Mary, Queen of Scots, attending the royal court to plead his case. She corresponded with Mary in England and actively promoted Mary’s cause in Scotland. Sir Thomas returned to public life 1583–5, but died in disgrace in March 1586. She continued to administer his estates, incurring the wrath of her step-son, Andrew Ker of Ferniehurst, in 1595. She died some time later, still defending her husband’s reputation and upholding Catholicism in the family. rg/mmm

• NRS: GD40/2/9, Lothian Muniments. Grant, R. (1999) ‘Politicking Jacobean women: Lady Ferniehurst, the Countess of Arran and the Countess of Huntly, c. 1580–1603’, in E. Ewan and M. M. Meikle (eds) Women in Scotland c. 1100–c. 1750; Meikle, M. M. (2004) A British Frontier? Lairds and Gentlemen of the Eastern Borders, 1504–1603; ODNB (2004); SP, ii, p. 231, iv, pp. 62–72.

n. Shearer, born Kirkwall, Orkney, 11 Jan. 1914, died (assumed) February 1943. Poet, short-story writer, children’s writer. Daughter of Jeannie Moir Murison, and John Shearer, tailor and hotel-keeper. Ann Shearer grew up in Orkney and attended Kirkwall Grammar School. Her mother died when she was 10 years old. She started as a journalist on The Orcadian newspaper aged 17, and moved south to work in Fleet Street in 1932. She began an archaeology course at the University of Edinburgh but left after one term to marry the writer George SCOTT-MONCRIEFF, Agnes Millar (Ann),

Scott-Moncrieff, whom she had met in London, in March 1934. They had two sons and a daughter. Their first home was a cottage in Peeblesshire, let in return for farm work, where they both followed writing careers. Ann was at first more successful than her husband, publishing two children’s books during the 1930s. They moved successively to Temple in Midlothian and to a cottage in Badenoch. Ann became a Roman Catholic in 1940 and was joined by her husband. In 1941 they moved to Haddington, their circle of friends including many of the writers of the Scottish Literary Renaissance. Ann contributed poems and short stories to newspapers and magazines, wrote for BBC radio, and published the children’s novel Auntie Robbo (1941), which has been reissued in paperback and translated into Swedish. Increasing ill-health was exacerbated by the stresses of freelance writing and of family life in wartime. She travelled north early in 1943 and was last seen alive in Nairn in February of that year. Contemporary tributes speak of her potential greatness as a writer. Her fellow Orkney writer, Edwin Muir, wrote a moving poem on her death. Her daughter thinks (L. Scott-Moncrieff 1987) that ‘something of her personal impact’ can be found in George Scott-Moncrief f ’s novel, Death’s Bright Shadow. In it, an important character is described thus: ‘The blazing youthful expectancy of her whole face and bearing . . . In some ways she was fantastically young, and then again so old’ (ScottMoncrieff, G. 1948, pp. 40, 68). marb • Scott-Moncrieff, A., Works as above, and (1934) Aboard the Bulger, (1936) The White Drake. Glasgow Herald, 10 March 1943 (obit.); Muir, E. (1987) ‘Ann Scott-Moncrief f ’, Chapman 47–8, Spring, p. 112 with tributes by Scott-Moncrieff, L., pp. 83–4, Davie, E. and Jamieson, M., pp. 113–14; The Scotsman, 11 March 1943 (obit.); Scott-Moncrieff, G. (1948) Death’s Bright Shadow. SCOTTISH WOMEN’S HOSPITALS (SWH) for Foreign Service‡

This movement was the brainchild of *Dr Elsie Inglis. It arose from her frustration that no use was made by the British War Office of women doctors when war broke out in 1914. The first generation of women through the medical schools were often unable to find jobs after qualifying. While minimally trained women volunteers were accepted as first-aiders or orderlies (known as VADs), the RAMC did not accept women doctors. Elsie Inglis suggested to the SFWSS that it might finance a hospital unit, fully staffed by women, for the Red 382

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Cross. But the Red Cross, too, came under the War Office and the offer was refused. Approaches were made instead to Allied governments and several accepted. The units were initially planned to consist of two doctors, ten nurses, an administrator, cooks and clerk, and would cost about £5,000. Appeals for funds started slowly: the first £1,000 was raised by 30 October 1914. The first French unit, seen off from Edinburgh by *Sarah Siddons Mair, went over in December, and was housed in the abbey of Royaumont, about twenty-five miles from Paris. Under Englishwoman Frances Ivens, Royaumont functioned throughout the war, and was depicted in paintings by *Norah Neilson Gray (see *Crofton 1997). The second unit, soon followed by a third, went to Serbia in January 1915, and almost immediately encountered a typhus epidemic which killed several of its staff. The Girton and Newnham unit (50% Scottish, 50% English) was based at Chanteloup, near Troyes. Among its Scottish doctors, Isabel Emslie (later Lady Hutton, 1887–1960) left France for Serbia, then Salonika, becoming CMO of a joint SWH unit and helping establish a permanent hospital at Vranje in 1919. A passionate supporter of women in medicine, she had a distinguished later career (Hutton 1960). Eventually about 14 units of the SWH were raised and worked in the field, attached to every Allied force in the west, except the British. (The War Office did later accept the participation of Scot *Dr Flora Murray at an allwoman hospital in London.) The Scottish identity of the SWH was maintained, with headquarters in Edinburgh, chaired for the SFWSS by Nellie Hunter (fl. 1914–18) with treasurer Jessie Laurie (fl. 1914–18), but the initiative was supported both with funds and personnel from England as well (and Elsie Inglis would have preferred the name ‘British Women’s Hospitals’). A large number of Scottish women doctors chose to work with these units (see the website listed below). They included *Louise McIlroy, present throughout the war, Mary Gordon (1861–1941), Lydia Henry (1891–1985), *Honoria Keer, Helen Lillie (1890–1977) and Agnes Savill (1875–1964). The unconventional Elizabeth Ness Ross‡ (1878–1915), having practised for years in Persia, volunteered for Serbia, working alongside SWH colleagues, before dying of typhus in the fever hospital at Kragujevac. Together with nurses and voluntary orderlies, Scotswomen made up about half of all the hospital staff. SR • Mitchell Library, Glasgow: Archives of the Scottish Women’s Hospitals.

BMJ, 13 March 1915 (obit. Ross); Crofton, E. (1997) The Women of Royaumont; Hutton, I. (1928) With a Woman’s Unit in Serbia, Salonika and Sebastopol, (1960) Memories of a Doctor in War and Peace; Leneman, L. (1994) In the Service of Life, (1998) Elsie Inglis; ODNB (2004) (entries on Gordon, Inglis, Hutton, Emslie, McIlroy); Ross, I. (1988) Little Grey Partridge. The website www.scottishwomenshospitals.co.uk, launched in 2013, has entries on the women named above and many others. SHARP, Elizabeth Amelia, n. Sharp, born Paisley 7 May 1856, died Hampstead 7 Sept. 1932. Editor, writer. Daughter of Agnes Farquharson, and Thomas Sharp. Following a secret engagement, Elizabeth Sharp married her cousin, writer William Sharp (1855–1905), in London in 1884. Their relationship developed through collaborative writing and independent projects associated with literature, music, art and Gaelic folklore. When Elizabeth Sharp edited Lyra Celtica (1896), her husband wrote an introduction and notes. When William Sharp wrote Progress of Art in the Century (1906), he included a section on music by his wife. A lifelong friend of suffragist *Mona Caird, Elizabeth Sharp championed women as writers: she compiled two anthologies of women’s poems (Sharp 1887b: binding by *Phoebe Traquair; and Sharp 1891). The Sharp couple were also party to an extraordinary literary deception, lasting several years. William Sharp created a female alter ego, under the pseudonym Fiona MacLeod: ‘Fiona’, a version of Fionn, was combined with the surname of Seumas MacLeod, a Gaelic fisherman and storyteller. He was inspired to do this through his relationship with Edith Wingate Rinder (a Celticist and a relative of Caird’s) who ‘unlocked new doors’ (DNB 1909, p. 223) after their meeting in Rome in the 1880s. He invented a life for his ‘cousin’ Fiona MacLeod, later backed up by an entry in Who’s Who (1905). The deception was remarkably effective, winning widespread interest in and praise for ‘her’ publications – including The Sin Eater (1895), contributions to Patrick Geddes’s Evergreen (1895–6), The Washer of the Ford (1896), Green Fire (1896), and other novels, Shorter Stories (1897), and poems From the Hills of a Dream: mountain songs and Highland runes (1897). Identified with ‘Celtic romance and dream and the glamour of the mysterious’, (William Sharp, letter of 12 Aug. 1893, www.sas.ac.uk), the writings were sometimes produced in states of spiritual

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and mesmeric trance, productive of psychological strain. The story is William’s not Elizabeth’s, but after his death, she wrote a Memoir (1910) giving an account of their combined lives and of ‘Fiona MacLeod’. Art critic for the Glasgow Herald for a while, Elizabeth Sharp gave up journalism in 1902, when her husband became increasingly ill. She maintained strong links with Scotland, visiting relatives in Glasgow, holidaying in Scotland, and identifying with her husband’s literary output. The Sharps had no children, travelled widely, and were often apart, but Elizabeth’s support for her husband was constant. ra • NLS: MSS 15941 (105–99), 11972; Strathclyde Univ., Geddes archives: corr. Sharp, E. A., Work as above, and (1887a) Sea Music, (1887b) Women’s Voices, (1891) Women Poets of the Victorian Era, (1893) Great Musical Composers, (1904) Rembrandt, (1906) The Progress of Art in the Century – append. A history of music in the nineteenth century, (1910) William Sharp (Fiona MacLeod), a Memoir compiled by his wife. Alaya, F. (1970) William Sharp – Fiona MacLeod 1855–1905; DNB (1909); ODNB (2004) (Sharp, William). Personal information: Louise Yeoman.

born Bargarran, Erskine, Renfrewshire, 1686, died after 1737. Entrepreneur and alleged victim of witchcraft. Daughter of Christian McGilchrist, and John Shaw, Laird of Bargarran. With her mother and sisters, Christian Shaw set up and ran the Bargarran Thread Company, which laid the foundation for the cotton industry in Paisley. Traditionally, she has also been thought of as ‘The Bargarran Imposter’, a malicious child who made fraudulent accusations against seven people, subsequently executed as witches in Paisley in 1697. However, contemporary scholarship would tend to exonerate her. That she was mentally ill or that she was maligned and was not the author of the words and deeds attributed to her are now the predominant views. Christian Shaw was only 11 years old at the time. It is said that she fell into fits, during which she was deaf and blind, at the mere mention of the names of the accused witches. They were also said to torment her by nipping and biting her, while being invisible to all others present apart from Christian. She was one of many supposed witnesses against the accused witches. There were other children who were reported as having had fits and other experiences similar to hers. What was peculiar about Christian Shaw as a child was that a book

SHAW, Christian, of Bargarran,

was written about her experiences as a demonstration to non-believers of the reality of the devil and the power and mercy of God (Anon. 1698). In 1719, Christian Shaw married the Rev. John Millar, minister of Kilmaurs. When, two years later, he died, Christian worked on the process of bleaching linen yarn perfectly white and producing very fine and very strong sewing thread from it. When she succeeded in this, she organised the production, distribution and sale of it under the name of ‘Bargarran Thread’. The thread was marketed with the family coat of arms – three gold cups with a sky-blue background – as its trademark in an attempt to differentiate it from the imitation ‘Bargarran Thread’ that appeared on the market. She seems to have retired from business when, in 1737, she married William Livingstone, a glover, in Edinburgh. hm c l • NRS: JC10/4, pp. 1–81; JC26/81/D9; PC1/51, pp. 136–9. Anon. (1698) A True Narrative of the Sufferings and Relief of a Young Girle ; McLachlan, H. V. and Swales, J. K. (2002) ‘The bewitchment of Christian Shaw . . .’, in Y. G. Brown and R. Ferguson (eds) Twisted Sisters (Bibl.); Wasser, M. (2002) ‘The western witch-hunt of 1697–1700 . . .’ in J. Goodare (ed.) The Scottish Witch-hunt in Context ; Young, W. ‘Parish of Erskine’, in J. Sinclair (ed.) [1791–99] (1973) The Statistical Account of Scotland.

n. McNab, born Leith 22 Oct. 1883, died Troon 27 Oct. 1946. Labour activist, councillor and MP. Daughter of Mary Deas Fraser, compositor, and Thomas Charles McNab, weaver. As a young woman, Clarice McNab taught music in Leith. She became involved with the Socialist Sunday Schools and later was national president for 25 years. Following its recruiting tour of Scotland, she joined the WLL, c. 1910. She served on its executive committee and was head of its Scottish district (1917–18). That position gave her a seat on the executive committee of the Scottish Advisory Committee (later Council) of the Labour Party. She was elected to Leith School Board and, in 1913, to Leith council, becoming the first Labour woman member of a town council in Scotland, and later a bailie. Her interests included child welfare and public health, women’s rights, equal pay for women teachers, and girls’ employment. She was also director of the Leith Co-operative Association. In 1918, she married Benjamin Shaw (1865– 1942), first secretary of the Scottish Labour Party, and moved to Glasgow and, in 1921, to Troon, where she was also elected to the town council. Her

SHAW, Clarice Marion,

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step-daughter, Mary Marjorie Annie Shaw (Marjorie) (1904–84) was a gifted linguist and graduate of the University of Glasgow (1927) who was Times correspondent in Russia during the Second World War and later taught languages at St Denis’s School, Edinburgh. In 1918, when the WLL disbanded, Clarice Shaw remained active in women’s organisations in the Labour Party at UK level and in Scotland. An extrovert and outstanding orator, she was known as an efficient and conscientious administrator. She became secretary to the Scottish Joint Committee of Labour, Co-operative and Trade Union Women, formed in 1934. She retained her seat on the Scottish Labour Party Council executive, which she chaired 1939–40, thus presiding at the 1940 Silver Jubilee conference where a presentation marked her unbroken yearly re-elections to the executive. She also served on Ayr County Council, 1932–6, where she chaired the Public Health Committee for a time, campaigning for state hospital and maternity provision and for nursery schools. After standing unsuccessfully for Ayr Burghs in the 1929 and 1931 general elections, she achieved a long-held ambition when she won Kilmarnock in 1945. However, she was prevented by illness from taking her seat, which she reluctantly resigned in September 1946. She died the following month. Her successor was Willie Ross, who had been one of her Sunday school pupils. cc • Reports of the Annual Conference of the Labour Party; Labour Party Archives and Study Centre, John Rylands Library, Manchester Univ.: Women’s Labour League Secretarial Correspondence and Related Papers; NLS: Acc. 12250 Marjorie Shaw papers. Collette, C. (1989) For Labour and for Women: the Women’s Labour League, 1906–18; DLabB, vol. 8; Glasgow Herald, 28 Oct. 1946 (obit.); ODNB (2004); SLL; Socialist Sunday School Union (1910) Socialist Sunday School Hymnbook.

n. Graham, MBE, born Glasgow 2 June 1879, died Glasgow 20 April 1964. Politician and activist. Daughter of Annie Gillespie, and David Graham, wine merchant. Educated privately, on 18 September 1902 Helen Graham married Major David Shaw of the 6th Cameronians (b. 1875/6), who was killed in action in 1915. They had a daughter and a son. During and after the First World War, Helen Graham was active in many war charities, notably as a member of the War Pensions Committee (1915), chair of the Lanarkshire Prisoners of War Relief Committee (1915) and member of the

SHAW, Helen Brown,

Food Control Committee (1917), and was made MBE in 1920. She was District Commissioner of the Lanarkshire Girl Guides (1919–36) and Vice-Chairman WVS (1938–46). After serving on Lanarkshire Education Authority, she became the first woman to be elected to Lanarkshire County Council, 1930–2. Following unsuccessful attempts in 1924 and 1929, she was elected as National Unionist (Conservative) MP for Bothwell in 1931, holding the seat until her defeat in 1935. As an MP, she lobbied for modernisation of the Lanarkshire mines and for new industries and infrastructure. In 1938, she became district administrator for the WVS for ARP, West of Scotland. Her son, Gavin, who followed her into politics as president of the Bothwell Unionist Association, was killed in action in 1943. tb • Motherwell Times, 25 Jan. 1935; SB; The Scotsman, 22 April 1964 (obit.); ODNB (2004). Additional information: Motherwell Heritage Centre.

m. Campbell, born Glenshaw, near Pittsburgh, USA, 9 Nov. 1903, died Fort William 11 Dec. 2004. Writer, photographer and recorder of Hebridean life. Daughter of Fanny Maria Patchin, and Henry Clay Shaw. Margaret Fay Shaw was intensely proud of her American origins and Scottish descent. Orphaned when young and brought up by sisters and relatives, she made little progress in formal education. In 1921, she travelled to Scotland to finish her schooling at St Bride’s, Helensburgh. Hearing *Marjory Kennedy-Fraser, doyenne of the ‘Celtic revival’, in concert, she determined to learn more about such music. Cycling tours of Britain, no mean feat in the 1920s, included the Hebrides and eventually South Uist, for which she formed a lifelong attraction. Taught piano to professional level but with a possible career blighted by rheumatism in wrists and hands, she returned to the Hebrides. She lodged with the sisters Màiri and Peigi MacRae, gifted singers and tradition-bearers, near Lochboisdale (1929–35), learnt Gaelic, and transcribed the community’s songs and traditions. Published in the meticulously edited and beautifully illustrated Folksongs and Folklore of South Uist (1955, 1977, 1986, 1999), they provide extraordinary testimony to the island’s wealth of oral tradition. Honorary doctorates from the universities of St Francis Xavier (Nova Scotia), Edinburgh, Aberdeen and the National University of Ireland later recognised her contribution.

SHAW, Margaret Fay,‡

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In 1935 Margaret Fay Shaw married John Lorne Campbell (1906–96), fellow student of Gaelic language and oral tradition. After he bought the island of Canna in 1938, they set up a hospitable home, entertaining friends and scholars and continuing their recording and writing, with visits to record the Gaelic of Nova Scotia. The Campbells presented Canna, with its important Celtic Studies archives, to the NTS in 1981. Widowed in 1996, Margaret continued living in Canna and entertaining friends and scholars. hc • Campbell, M. S., Works as above, and (1947) ‘Hunting folk songs in the Hebrides’, Nat. Geog. Mag., vol. 91, (1956) ‘Gaelic Folksongs from South Uist’, in Studia Memoriae Belae Bartók Sacra, (1993) From the Alleghenies to the Hebrides. The Independent, 15 Dec. 2004 (obit.). Private information. SHAW, Winifred Mason (Winnie), m. Wooldridge, born Clarkston, Glasgow, 18 Jan. 1947, died Woking, Surrey, 30 March 1992. Tennis star. Daughter of Winifred Mason, former tennis champion, and Angus Shaw, journalist. Coached by her mother, Winnie Shaw swept up every Scottish title open to her while still at Hutcheson’s Grammar School. After winning the British Junior Hardcourt Championship in 1964, she moved to London at the age of 17. A gutsy senior debut at Wimbledon 1965 against champion Maria Bueno led to selection for both the Wightman and Federation Cups in 1966. She ultimately represented Great Britain on 26 occasions. Her best tennis was played in the early 1970s. A singles quarter-finalist at Wimbledon (1970, 1971) and a semi-finalist at the Australian Open (1970, 1971), she was the only Scot, in the open era, to contest Grand Slam finals: the French mixed doubles (1971 with Toomas Lejus of the USSR) and women’s doubles (1972 with Nell Truman). Her best-known performance came at Wimbledon in 1972, when she and fellow-Scot Joyce Williams lost a doubles semi-final in three sets to Billie-Jean King and Betty Stove. Then suddenly, it was all over. She married tennis player Ken Wooldridge, retired from the international circuit, and took up golf, representing Scotland in 1983. She was Surrey champion in 1987 and 1990 but, collapsing on the course at Wentworth in 1991, she was found to have an incurable brain tumour and died a year later. She was a gifted sportswoman and one of the finest tennis players Scotland has ever produced. jk

Oxford 31 Jan. 2006. Dancer, actor and writer. Daughter of Margaret Crawford Reid, n. Shearer, and Harold King, civil engineer. Educated first in Northern Rhodesia, where she started ballet, then in Dunfermline and Bearsden, Moira Shearer trained in London, with Flora Fairbairn, then Nicholas Legat and, after 1937, his widow Nadine Nicolayeva. Thus grounded in Russian tradition, she joined Sadler’s Wells School in 1940, debuting professionally (1941) with Mona Inglesby’s International Ballet. By 1944 a Sadler’s Wells principal, she followed Margot Fonteyn and Pamela May in 1946 as Princess Aurora in Sleeping Beauty, establishing her ballerina status. Persuaded by Ninette de Valois for publicity’s sake, she took the leading role in Powell and Pressburger’s 1948 film The Red Shoes. Her vivid red hair, delicate beauty and fine voice made her a compelling star and the role brought her widespread fame. She felt later, however, that it had cost her key steps in technical development and company engagement, though she returned to Sadler’s Wells, becoming in 1952 – at only 26 – a guest artist. Having married Ludovic [later Sir Ludovic] Kennedy in 1950 and had her first child, she largely withdrew from dance, concentrating throughout the later 1950s on acting, touring, filming and appearing with London and Bristol Old Vics. After three more children, she occasionally revisited the stage, even appearing in a 1987 television ballet, A Simple Man. She commèred the 1972 Eurovision Song Contest in Edinburgh and served on the SAC (1971–3), BBC General Advisory Council (1970–7) and Border Television’s board (1977–82). Meantime she lectured, broadcast, gave literary recitals and wrote – lively Daily/Sunday Telegraph book reviews; Balletmaster: a dancer’s view of George Balanchine (1986); and a 1998 Ellen Terry biography. IB

• Shearer, M., Works as above. The Daily Telegraph, 2 Feb. 2006, The Guardian, 2 Feb. 2006, The Independent, 3 Feb. 2006, New York Times, 2 Feb. 2006 (obits); eODNB.

born East Peterculter 11 Feb. 1893, died Aberdeen 27 Feb. 1981. Writer and teacher. Daughter of Jane Smith Kelly, and John Shepherd, mechanical engineer. Nan Shepherd was brought up with her elder brother, Frank, in the family home of ‘Dunvegan’, Cults, Deeside, and spent most of her life there. She was educated at Cults School and Aberdeen

SHEPHERD, Anna (Nan),

• The Independent, 1 April 1992 (obit.); Scotland on Sunday, 23 June 2002, Scottish Sports Hall of Fame.

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High School for Girls before going on to study at the University of Aberdeen, where she graduated (MA 1915). She lectured in English at the Training Centre for Teachers (later the College of Education), Aberdeen, from 1915 until her retirement in 1956. Although she was involved in literary activities throughout her life, her novels The Quarry Wood (1928), The Weatherhouse (1930) and A Pass in the Grampians (1933) were published in one burst of creativity and were met with ­critical acclaim both in Britain and the USA. They are notable both for their use of Scots and their perceptive rendering of female experience. All three novels have a strong sense of place and of the life of small communities. Set in the north-east of Scotland, they illustrate the tensions between traditional and changing ways of living. In particular, The Quarry Wood follows a young woman’s struggle for formal education and her growing understanding that wisdom is based on more than academic learning. Nan Shepherd continued to write articles and reviews and numbered among her friends *Willa Muir, *Jessie Kesson, whose early writing she encouraged, and Hugh MacDiarmid. She was also a friend of the poet Charles Murray, whose last poems she prepared for publication in 1969, and of the writer and historian *Agnes Mure Mackenzie, publishing a portrait of her in 1955. She edited the Aberdeen University Review (1957–63), writing articles for it on topics including women in the early days of the university. She was awarded an honorary LLD from the University of Aberdeen in 1964. Nan Shepherd was a keen traveller and hillwalker, reflected in her only collection of poems, In the Cairngorms (1934), and in The Living Mountain: A Celebration of the Cairngorm Mountains of Scotland (1977). Both works explore connections between the power of nature and the life of the mind. Her novels were out of print for many years but critical interest in them has revived since their recent re-publication. There is a stone dedicated to her in Makars’ Court, Lady Stair’s Close, Edinburgh. In 2016 an image of Nan Shepherd was chosen to appear on the Royal Bank of Scotland’s new £5 polymer note. aml • NLS: MSS 26256, 26073–4, 26706, 26900, 27438–45, Nan Shepherd papers; UAL: Letters, Special Collections and Archives: MS 2750/1–42 and MS 3017/8/1/1–3. Shepherd N., Works as above and see Peacock (Bibl). Anderson, C. and Christianson, A. (eds) (2000) Scottish Women’s Fiction, 1920s to 1960s; ECSWW; Forrest, V. (1986/7) ‘In Search of Nan Shepherd’, Leopard Magazine ;

HSWW (Bibl.); ODNB (2004); Peacock, C. (2017) Into the Mountain: a life of Nan Shepherd (Bibl.); Watson, R. (1996) ‘Introduction’, The Grampian Quartet.

n. Primrose, of Dalmeny, born Barnbougle Castle, Dalmeny, 31 Dec. 1777, died London 7 Jan. 1847. Philosopher. Daughter of Mary Vincent, and Neil Primrose, 3rd Earl of Rosebery. Lady Mary Primrose was raised at Barnbougle Castle and educated according to the traditional curriculum of the ‘Scotch plan’ by a Mr Pillans, who taught Latin, geography, mathematics, history and philosophy. She and her four siblings were avid readers and talkers who exchanged essays in the form of letters. Lady Mary took an interest in philosophical analysis, and by the age of 27, according to her daughter, she had written numerous manuscripts exposing errors in the reasoning of Hume and Priestley. On 11 April 1808, she married Henry John Shepherd (c. 1783–1855), son of the prominent London lawyer, Sir Samuel Shepherd. They had three children and she became an active member of London society, hosting leading thinkers of the day. Her social circle included, among others, David Ricardo, William Whewell, Charles Babbage, *Mary Somerville and Richard Whately. Lady Mary’s two published books, An Essay upon the Relation of Cause and Effect, controverting the doctrine of Mr. Hume (1824) and Essays on the Perception of an External Universe (1827), addressed the theories of Berkeley, Reid, Hume, Stewart, Brown and Lawrence. In responding to Hume, Lady Mary developed an original defence of the causal relation, drawing on both rationalist and empiricist principles. William Whewell is said to have used one of her books as a text at Cambridge, and Robert Blakey included a summary of her philosophy in his A History of the Philosophy of Mind (1848). A short memorial of her life was published in the Gentleman’s Magazine of August 1847. jm c r

SHEPHERD, Lady Mary,

• Shepherd, Lady M., Works as above, and McRobert, J. (ed.) (2000) The Philosophical Works of Lady Mary Shepherd, 2 vols (Bibl.). Anon. (1847) ‘Lady Mary Shepherd’, Gentleman’s Magazine 28, August, p. 209; Blakey, R. (1848) A History of the Philosophy of Mind: Embracing all Writers on Mental Science from the Earliest Period to the Present Time, 4 vols; ODNB (2004). SHEPPARD, Catherine Wilson (Katherine or Kate), n. Malcolm, m1 Sheppard, m2 Lovell-Smith, born

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New Zealand, 13 July 1934. Suffragist, New Zealand. Daughter of Jemima Souter, and Andrew Malcolm, clerk. Born to Scottish parents, Kate Malcolm apparently spent much of her childhood in Nairn, living with an uncle who was a minister in the Free Church of Scotland. After her father’s death, the family emigrated in 1868 to Christchurch, New Zealand, where she and her siblings joined in the philanthropic and cultural life of the town. Active in the Congregational Church, she married Walter Sheppard (1836–1915), a storekeeper, in 1891. They had one son. A strong prohibitionist, Kate Sheppard joined the New Zealand WCTU when it was founded in 1885. As Superintendent of the WCTU’s Franchise Department, she led the campaign for women’s suffrage in New Zealand. In the face of strong opposition, displaying courage, tenacity and tact, she addressed public meetings, edited a franchise page for a fortnightly temperance paper, wrote articles and pamphlets, organised three nationwide petitions, lobbied politicians, and provided guidance for suffrage campaigners throughout the country. On 19 September 1893, New Zealand became the first country in the world to give the parliamentary vote to women, both European and Maori. On subsequent visits to Britain, Kate Sheppard met suffrage leaders, and was a valued speaker at meetings in England and Scotland. Back in New Zealand, she helped found the NCW, and campaigned for further social reforms, also preparing reports on the ­position of women in New Zealand, and on the effects of women’s suffrage, for the ICW. In later life, she endured ill-health and bereavement. Her son, who had married the daughter of *Margaret Sievwright, died in 1910; her husband died in 1915 and her grandchild in 1930. In 1925, she married William Lovell-Smith (1852–1929), who predeceased her. Kate Sheppard is remembered in New Zealand on Suffrage Day, 19 September, each year. Her face appears on the New Zealand $10 note, a street in the capital is named after her, and her Memorial stands on the banks of the Avon River in Christchurch. jd • Canterbury Museum, Christchurch, NZ: K. W. Sheppard papers. Devaliant, J. (1992) Kate Sheppard; DNZB; Grimshaw, P. (1972) Women’s Suffrage in New Zealand; ODNB (2004); Page, D. (1993) The Suffragists.

m. Richardson, born Ettrick 1782, died Yarrow 23 July 1878. Innkeeper. Daughter of Mary Shiel, and Walter Shiel. Tibbie Shiel, a second daughter, had little education and worked on local farms. She married Robert Richardson, a molecatcher, in 1806 and set up house in the Yarrow Valley, in the Scottish Borders. They moved into a cottage near St Mary’s Loch with their three sons and three daughters. It was a simple building, two downstairs rooms and a floored attic. Robert died the next year and Tibbie Shiel, now the sole provider for the family, opened a small inn offering wholesome food and cheap ­lodgings for those who wished to fish the neighbouring lochs and burns. In her childhood, Tibbie Shiel had worked with *Margaret Laidlaw, mother of James Hogg, the Ettrick Shepherd, and so knew the poet well. James Hogg had also moved into the Yarrow Valley when he received the farm of Altrieve Lake from the Duke of Buccleuch at a nominal rent. He was a frequent visitor at the inn and Tibbie Shiel summed up her friend: ‘for aa the nonsense he wrote, Hogg was a gey sensible man in some things’ (CraigBrown 1886, p. 392). Hogg was a good publicist for Tibbie Shiel’s establishment and when Christopher North first visited in 1829, he based his Noctes Ambrosianae on the inn. It became a place for celebrities to meet, talk and write. Tibbie Shiel’s descendants live in nearby Henderland Farm. we

SHIEL, Isabella (Tibbie),

• Craig-Brown, T. (1886) History of Selkirkshire; North, C. (Prof J. Wilson) [1822–35] (1876) Comedy of the Noctes Ambrosianae; Russel, J. (1894) Reminiscences of Yarrow. SHIRE, Helena Mary Mennie, n. Mennie,

Hon LLB, born Aberdeen 21 June 1912, died Cambridge 16 Nov. 1991. Scholar, teacher. Daughter of Jane Ewen Rae, and John Henderson Mennie, headmaster. Dux of Aberdeen High School for Girls (1929), Helena Mennie graduated from the University of Aberdeen in English Literature and Language in 1933. An Affiliated Student, Newnham, she graduated in English in 1935 and undertook research on the Bedlam Ballads. She married physicist Edward Shire (1908–78) in 1936, settling in Cambridge. From 1935 she lectured (WEA; Board of Extramural Studies), in wartime in Medieval Literature at Queen Mary, London and in English for Foreign Students at LSE. To teach Polish students she learned Polish, her creative collaborations and

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support recognised by the Republic of Poland’s Order of Merit (1991). From 1940, as English faculty member, Helena Mennie Shire combined supervision, lively inspiring teaching, and care for three children. In the 1950s she pioneered research on the ‘lost’ repertory of Renaissance Scotland’s music and song and its European context. The many associated broadcasts, papers and publications include the seminal Song, Dance and Poetry at the Court of Scotland Under King James VI (1969). After her husband’s death she took on another major project, collecting and editing the poems of her contemporary *Olive Fraser. She was a founding Fellow of Robinson College in 1981. JH a

was taken over by an instrument-maker named Hart in 1861. Patrick Geddes rented it and made it his Outlook Tower in 1896. Doubts have been raised about Maria Short’s parentage (her age at death was recorded as ‘about 70’, which may be inaccurate) and her claim to the Telescope, but she successfully fought off such challenges during her lifetime. fj • NLS: MS 1553 f252, 257; 1861 Census; Edinburgh City Archive. AOC Archaeology Group, Calton Hill Conservation Plan, August 1999 (http://download.edinburgh.gov.uk/calton); Brück, H. A. (1983) The Story of Astronomy in Edinburgh; Brück, M. T. (2009) Women in Early British and Irish Astronomy: stars and satellites; Wallace, V. (1992) ‘Maria Obscura’, Edinburgh Review, 88.

• UAL: MS 3407 Helena Mennie Shire Papers. Shire, H. M., Works as above, and the following selection: (1957) (with K. Elliott) Music of Scotland 1500–1700; (1960) Poems from Panmure House; (1961) Poems and Songs of Sir Robert Ayton; (1973) King Orphius and Sir Colling; (1978) A Preface to Spenser; (1989) The Wrong Music: the poems of Olive Fraser 1909–1977. Gardner-Medwin, A. and Hadley Williams, J. (eds) (1990) A Day Estivall: essays on the music, poetry and history of Scotland and England . . . in honour of Helena Mennie Shire; Hadley Williams, J. (2005) ‘“To open a door upon the past of Scotland”: Helena Mennie Shire (1912–1991)’, in J. Chance (ed.) Women Medievalists and the Academy (Bibl.); Smith, A. (2013) Shire.

m. Henderson, born Edinburgh before 1788, died Edinburgh 15 Jan. 1869. Observatory owner. Daughter of Jacobina Downie, and Thomas Short, optician and scientific instrument maker. Part of a scientific family, Maria Short claimed the Great Telescope made by her uncle, James Short (1710–68). Her father had never completed his own attempt to use it as the centrepiece for an Observatory on Calton Hill. On his death in 1788, the Telescope fell into the possession of Edinburgh Council. A child at the time, Maria Short reappeared from Ireland in 1827 to reclaim it. Her plans met council opposition and she raised money by public subscription. The Telescope having been returned to her in 1828, she opened her successful ‘Popular Observatory’ on Calton Hill in 1835. In 1843, she married Thomas Henderson. After conflict with the council and rivalry from another observatory, Maria Short was evicted in 1850, but in 1856 opened ‘Short’s Observatory’ on a new site on Castle Hill, home of the current Camera Obscura. Still known as ‘Short’s Observatory’, it

SHORT, Maria Theresa,

n. Murray, born Norwich 16 April 1783, died Edinburgh 24 Nov. 1844. Actor, singer and theatre manager. Daughter of Ann Acres and Charles Murray, actors. Harriet Murray was born into the leading acting dynasty of British theatre. Her mother (formerly the wife of Jonathan Payne) was an actor (fl. 1770–99), and her father was the son of the prominent Jacobite Sir John Murray of Broughton. Her own reputation combined a celebrated London and provincial acting career and a distinguished tenure as patentee and manager in Edinburgh. The date of her debut is uncertain, either 1791 at Bristol in a performance of King John for her father’s benefit, or in Bath on 1 July 1793. She appeared as Titania at Bath in 1792 and 1793 and was Palmyra in James Miller and John Hoadly’s Mahomet the Imposter in Birmingham on 28 August 1797. She made her London debut on 12 May 1798 as Perdita and joined the Covent Garden company for the 1798–99 season, where she continued in highprofile roles until 1804–5. She married Henry Siddons (1774–1815), the eldest son of celebrated actor Sarah Siddons ­(1755–1831), on 22 June 1802. They had four children who reached maturity – Sarah, Henry, William and Elizabeth, who was the mother of *Sarah Mair. In autumn 1802, Harriet and Henry Siddons went over to the Drury Lane house, appearing in the major roles of the day until the end of the 1808–9 season when they left London for Edinburgh where Henry had obtained the patent (the licence to play legitimate drama) in the major house, the Theatre Royal. Henry Siddons first appeared as patentee on 14 November 1809

SIDDONS, Harriet,

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when he acted the Duke, opposite Harriet as Juliana, in John Tobin’s The Honeymoon. For the next six seasons Harriet Siddons worked assiduously for the Edinburgh company, appearing in some 100 roles and turning down the opportunity to act opposite Edmund Kean at Drury Lane. Henry Siddons died of tuberculosis in 1815. Harriet took over the management of the Edinburgh house, assisted by her brother, the actor William Henry Murray. Their management was associated with the emergence of the national drama, the often-patriotic stage adaptations of the novels of Sir Walter Scott, and forged a tradition of respectable, legitimate playing in the Scottish capital, where she was celebrated as ‘our own Mrs Siddons’. Her last benefit was on 29 March 1830, when she played Lady Townly in Colley Cibber’s The Provok’d Husband and spoke a farewell address written for her by her long-term supporter Sir Walter Scott. She appeared in a handful of other benefit roles for colleagues in the remainder of that season before retiring completely from the stage. Harriet Siddons and her husband are buried in Greyfriars churchyard, Edinburgh. as • Crochunis, T. C. (2015) ‘Leading lady of the Patent House: Harriet Siddons in Edinburgh’ International Journal of Scottish Theatre and Screen 8 (1), pp. 54–68 (Bibl.); Dibdin, J. C. (1888) Annals of the Edinburgh Stage ; Highfill, P. H. Jr., Burnim, K. A. and Langhans, E. A. (c. 1973–93) A Biographical Dictionary of Actors . . . and Other Stage Personnel in London, 1660–1800; ODNB (2004) (Henry Siddons).

n. Balfour, born Whittinghame, East Lothian, 11 March 1845, died Woking 10 Feb. 1936. College principal, mathematician. Daughter of Lady Blanche Gascoyne Cecil, and James Maitland Balfour, MP. Nora Balfour was the eldest of eight children, whose father died when they were very young. Several had eminent careers, Arthur Balfour (1848–1930) later becoming prime minister. She herself had a talent for mathematics, having been well taught privately, but never followed a degree course, although she later collaborated with her brother-in-law Lord Rayleigh on measurements of electricity. Other ‘unqualified’ Scottish women mathematicians included her contemporaries Flora and Jane Sang (fl. 1850–90s), who helped their father Edward Sang (1805–90) to compile his famous logarithm tables. Nora Balfour married Henry Sidgwick ­(1838–1900), teacher of philosophy at Trinity SIDGWICK, Eleanor Mildred (Nora),

College, Cambridge. It was a marriage conducted as an intellectual and affectionate partnership. Henry Sidgwick had helped found Newnham College for women students, and Nora Sidgwick taught mathematics there, while maintaining their home as an intellectual centre. She became vice-principal in 1880, and the college’s financially far-sighted principal in 1891. Nora Sidgwick imposed her rational and benign vision of women’s education on Newnham, instituting what has been called its ‘golden age’ (ODNB 2004), although women would not be allowed to graduate from the University of Cambridge in her lifetime. She served on a Royal Commission for secondary education and supported the suffrage campaign, though disapproving of militant action. She and her husband were both closely involved with the Society for Psychical Research, generally taking a sceptical view of the paranormal: she gave short shrift to Madame Blavatsky, for example. Widowed in 1900, she retired as principal in 1910 but maintained links with Newnham and received honorary degrees from Edinburgh and St Andrews among others. sr • Sidgwick, A. and E. (1906) A Memoir of Henry Sidgwick. ODNB (2004) (both Sidgwicks and Sang, Edward); Sidgwick, E. (1938) Mrs Henry Sidgwick, a Memoir. SIEVWRIGHT, Margaret Home, n. Richardson, born Pencaitland, East Lothian, 19 March 1844, died Gisborne, New Zealand, 9 March 1905. Political activist, feminist, New Zealand. Daughter of Jane Law Home, and John Richardson, estate factor. Growing up in and near Edinburgh, Margaret Richardson acquired a thorough knowledge of classical writings and the Bible and an enthusiasm for liberal humanist ideals. All her life she retained a love of learning and a commitment to improving society, especially conditions for women and children. After teaching in Ragged Schools in Edinburgh, she trained as a nurse, and campaigned against the Contagious Diseases Acts both in Britain and later in New Zealand, calling them ‘iniquitous laws’. The repeal of discriminatory legislation was part of her vision for an ‘ethical world’ (Sievwright c. 1902, pp. 2–4). Aged about 33, Margaret Richardson left Britain for Dunedin, New Zealand, probably by invitation. Her personal contacts there introduced her to networks of prominent intellectuals, liberals and political activists, including widower William Sievwright, a solicitor from Lerwick, whom she married in Wellington in November 1878. In 1883, the couple settled in isolated Poverty Bay near Gisborne, with their three

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young children (two from William Sievwright’s former marriage). Through reading and correspondence, Margaret Sievwright stayed in contact with developments in international feminism and, with the help of her sympathetic husband, acquired a deep knowledge of the law. She built a small school on the family property, provided local nursing assistance and led political discussion groups from home. Active in Gisborne as a temperance and women’s suffrage campaigner, Margaret Sievwright achieved national and international renown as a feminist leader once New Zealand women won the right to vote in 1893. She wrote prolifically for women’s political journals and, as vice-president, then president (1901–5) of the New Zealand NCW, she lobbied actively for a wide range of humanitarian statutory reforms. Although softly spoken and retiring by nature, she was probably the most radical and visionary of early New Zealand feminists, many of whom were Scottish by birth or parentage. Her views on women’s economic independence within marriage and her pacifism during the Boer War earned her opprobrium in the press, but she was widely loved and respected. Her daughter Wilhelmina married the son of Margaret’s fellow-campaigner *Kate Sheppard. A memorial was dedicated to Margaret Sievwright in Gisborne in 1906, with NCW and ICW support. rm c c • National Register of Archives and Manuscripts, NZ (www. nram.org.nz): various references: NRAM: W20, W28, W115, W141, Y980. Sievwright, M. H. (c. 1902) The Removal of the Civil and Political Disabilities of Women, Articles in contemporary journals: Daybreak, the Prohibitionist, the White Ribbon. Devaliant, J. (1992) Kate Sheppard; McGrannachan, M. (1993) A Fair Field and No Favour ; DNZB; ‘White Ribbon’, Jour. NZWCTU, 15 March 1905 (tributes by Sheppard, K. W. and A. W. [Ada Wells]). SILEAS NIGHEAN MHIC RAGHNAILL (Sìleas na Ceapaich, Cicely MacDonald), c. 1660–c. 1729.

Jacobite and Clan Donald bard. Daughter of Mary Cameron (or MacMartin), and Gilleasbuig, Chief of the MacDonalds of Keppoch. Sìleas na Ceapaich was a poet from the higher strata of Gaelic society, well acquainted with the forms of bardic elegy, who adopted many of the characteristics of the classical style when composing songs on the deaths of important people in her life. This is particularly evident in her lament for Alasdair of Glengarry, which contains the longest

list of kennings and related images in Scottish Gaelic verse as well as ending with a classical dúnadh. Sìleas na Ceapaich was opposed to the 1707 Union of the parliaments, describing it in one of her earliest poems as ‘uinnein puinnsein’ (a poisoned onion) served up to the Scots. She composed several songs connected to the Jacobite Rising of 1715, including ‘Do Rìgh Seumas’ (To King James), late 1714 or early 1715, and at least one poem composed after the battle of Sherrifmuir. She composed several hymns and religious poems, and two songs, probably those later condemned as ‘coarse and indelicate’ (Ó Baoill 1972, pp. 125–6) in which she gives advice on sexual morality: ‘Comhairle air na Nigheanan Òga’ (Advice to Young Girls) and ‘An Aghaidh na h-Obair Nodha’ (Against the New Work). In the first song, she uses her own experiences in order to outline the pitfalls of a too ready belief in the flattery of young men. This has led to the suggestion that she herself had an illegitimate child, Gilleasbuig, before her marriage to Alexander Gordon of Camdell in 1685, by whom she had at least five and possibly nine children. The second song was composed as a direct response to MacKenzie of Gruineard’s ‘An obair nogha’ (The New Work) in which the poet praises sexual licence in explicit terms, using female characters to illustrate his case. Sìleas na Ceapaich describes the consequences which girls will have to face if they succumb to the new fashion being promoted by Mackenzie’s song: pregnancy, ­abandonment, disgrace and the disapprobation of the Church. af • Ó Baoill, C. (ed.) (1972) Bàrdachd Shìlis na Ceapaich: poems and songs by Sìleas MacDonald. Black, R. (ed.) (2001) An Lasair ; ECSWW: Kerrigan, C. (1991) An Anthology of Scottish Women’s Poetry; MacGill-eain, S. (1985) Ris a’Bhruthaich, W. Gillies, ed., p. 235; ODNB (2004) (see NicDhòmhnaill, Sìleas); Thomson, D. S. (1990) An Introduction to Gaelic Poetry, pp. 135–6.

m. Reeve, born Charlottenburg, Berlin, 18 May 1917, died Edinburgh 7 Jan. 2003. Artist and writer. Daughter of Grete Goldberg and Walter Simon. In 1932, this Jewish family moved to London, although Edith Simon returned briefly to Berlin to complete her education before attending the Slade and the Central School of Art. In early years she made a living from book illustration and jacket design. Her first book was published in 1937, and

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her translation of Arthur Koestler’s The Gladiators in 1940. In 1942, marriage to geneticist Eric Reeve led to a move to Edinburgh, where she combined her writing career with care of their three children. She published a total of 17 books (history, novels, and biography). She re-focused on the visual arts and, as well as painting, experimented with diverse materials and techniques. Self-imposed disciplines such as resin for sculpture and continuous-line drawing led to greater freedom of expression. She devised a method of using a scalpel to cut through layers of paper to expose colours, create shadows and produce likenesses which rivalled paint in their complexity. The aim was never to make a pretty picture but to engage and hold the viewer. Visitors to 30 annual exhibitions in Edinburgh were encouraged to ponder the depth of the work and converse with the artist. Edith Simon excelled at one-line drawings, figurative depictions, innovative sculpture, and multi-layered paper-cuts. Works are held by the University of Edinburgh Student Centre, St Mary’s Cathedral and the City Art Centre, among other places. ems • NLS: Edith Simon archive. Demarco, R., ‘Edith Simon’, Glasgow Herald, 24 Feb. 2003; ‘Edith Simon: Signals’, Edinburgh Festival Exhibition Catalogue, Aug. 1991 (Bibl.); Goodwin, I. [Edith’s younger sister] and Sutherland, G. (2005) Moderation Be Damned; Harrower, S. (2017) ‘Creative force: Edith Simon’, Discover (35) pp. 10–15; The Scotsman, 30 Jan. 2003 (obit.). SINCLAIR, Catherine, born Edinburgh 17 April 1800, died London 6 August 1864. Children’s writer. Daughter of Lady Diana Macdonald, and Sir John Sinclair, agriculturist and statistician. The Caithness flags in the pavement outside their house were known as ‘the Giants’ Causeway’ (Walford 1984, p. 18) as the Sinclair children were extremely tall. Catherine Sinclair, the seventh of 13 children, acted as her father’s secretary from 1814 until his death in 1835, and his famed lack of humour may have influenced her early conventional, moralising novels for children and adults. In her greatest success, Holiday House (1839), based on stories told to her nieces and nephews, she deliberately portrays children who are ‘noisy, frolicsome [and] mischievous’ (Sinclair 1839, p. vii) but good-hearted and likeable. The more subtle moral tone is masked by their high-spirited adventures and a ‘Nonsensical Story’, in which a giant ‘was obliged to climb on a ladder to comb his hair’ (ibid., p. 172). It was judged ‘the most original children’s book written up to that time and one of the

jolliest and most hilarious of any period’ (Darton 1932, p. 220), and it marked the transition of children’s stories from improving tales to the subversive views of Lewis Carroll. Although Holiday House remained in print for 100 years, her best seller was a popular series of coloured Picture Letters for children (1861–4). Catherine Sinclair was well known in Edinburgh for several philanthropic ventures: establishing soup kitchens, an industrial school for girls, public benches, and the first public drinkingfountain in the city – all referred to on the 60-foot gothic stone memorial to her on the corner of North Charlotte Street and St Colme Street. Her niece *Lucy Walford, also a novelist, describes Catherine Sinclair’s charm of manner and witty conversation, and the unmarried Sinclairs’ hospitable household at 133 George Street as a centre of Edinburgh society. jrr • NLS: MS 24640: original hand-illustrated copy of Holiday House ; Corr.; BL: MSS 46651–2: Accounts & Corr.; Add. MSS 44393 and 46117. Sinclair, C. [1839] (1976 facsimile reprint) Holiday House: a book for the young (Bibl.). Darton, F. J. H. (1932, 3rd edn. 1982) Children’s Books in England, pp. 219–21; DNB (1897 edn. lists most of 35 books); Hunt, P. (ed.) (2001) Children’s Literature: an anthology 1801–1902, pp. 49–54; ODNB (2004); Shattuck, J. (1993) The Oxford Guide to British Women Writers; The Times, 15 August 1864 (obit.); Walford, L. [1910] (1984) Recollections of a Scottish Novelist.

born 1776, died Wick 3 May 1795. Journeywoman mantua-maker. Daughter of Elizabeth Sinclair of Dun, and William Sinclair of Mey. Bell Sinclair was one of eleven surviving Sinclair children. Their mother died on 13 June 1785, their father on 9 February 1792, leaving the family unprovided for. She learned mantuamaking in Thurso from Miss Betty Sinclair but she was advised against setting up business there because there was not enough work for local mantua-makers. A friend told her that anyone hoping to set up needed experience in Edinburgh (NRS: GD139/366/4): she went there in 1794, working for the Misses Sinclair and other mantua-makers. She wrote home that she had become acquainted with all the new fashions, yet she made no profit, as she only ‘worked for her meat’ (ibid., GD139/370/2). Although she intended to marry a Mr Sutherland and move to the West Indies, severe illness forced her to return home to Wick, where she died of

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consumption, aged 19. She exemplifies the woman of gentry background who had to undertake paid work for her living. ecs • NRS: GD139, Sutherland of Forse Muniments. WWEE. SINCLAIR, Margaret Anne [Sister Mary Francis of the Five Wounds], born Edinburgh, 29 March

1900, died Warley, Essex, 24 Nov. 1925. Venerable Poor Clare nun. Daughter of Elizabeth Kelly, and Andrew Sinclair, street-sweeper. The third of six surviving children, Margaret Sinclair was described as ‘a bit of a sport’ (O’Rourke 1930, p. 7) and a satisfactory pupil. At age 14 she began full-time work as a french polisher with Waverley Cabinet Works, Edinburgh, and between 1918 and 1923 she worked for Sheerwinter, the Civil Service Stores and McVitie and Price. In 1919 she started a relationship with ex-serviceman, Patrick Lynch, but ended it in 1922. The following year she entered as extern sister London’s Poor Clare Colettine order at Notting Hill (a rigorous enclosed order whose extern sisters were the link to the outside world). She took as her name in religion Sister Mary Francis of the Five Wounds. Throughout her youth she exhibited a deep spirituality and had maintained regular religious observance, even as a worker. In 1926, soon after her early death from tuberculosis, a campaign was launched for her beatification and canonisation; in 1930 her cause became official with Rome and in 1978 she was declared Venerable by Paul VI. Although popularly portrayed as an active trade unionist, it is more likely that her membership was discreet. Nevertheless, it was the image ‘Margaret Sinclair, factory worker’, coupled with her ordinariness and humble background, that attracted a significant following among the working classes in Scotland and beyond. Originally buried at Kensal cemetery, London, she was moved to Mount Vernon cemetery, Edinburgh, in 1927 and in 2003 her body was placed in the side chapel of St Patrick’s Church, Edinburgh. skk • Scottish Catholic Archives, Edinburgh; Margaret Sinclair Archive, St Patrick’s Church, Edinburgh. Barry, D. E. (1952) The Story of Margaret Sinclair ; *ODNB (2005 update); O’Brien, F. (1989) The Cheerful Giver: Margaret Sinclair ; O’Rourke, M. R. (1930) Margaret Sinclair ; The Times, 11 July 2003; Watts, J. (2016) A Beautiful Fragrance: the story of Margaret Sinclair. Private information: Raymond Burnett (nephew); Poor Clares, Humbie, East Lothian; Fr Richard Reid, Edinburgh.

SKEA, Isabella Low, n. Chalmers, born Bridge of Don 16 Jan. 1845, died Aberdeen 7 Oct. 1914. Headmistress, campaigner for women’s rights. Daughter of Elspet Low and George Chalmers, tenant farmers. Isabella Chalmers was encouraged by her schoolmaster and trained at the Church of Scotland Normal College in Edinburgh c. 1866. Returning to Aberdeen, she became Girls’ Head, then overall Headteacher of East Parish Sessional School (afterwards St Paul Street Public Elementary School), and was the fifth woman to become a Fellow of the EIS. Having created a model example in her own school, she was particularly interested in the development of school libraries. She opposed ‘payment by results’ for teachers as educationally unsound, but her own pupils’ performance made her one of the highest paid teachers in Aberdeen in the 1870s. Married to William Skea, a printer/journalist (25 Dec. 1884), she firmly believed that marriage need not interfere with a woman’s career. The Skeas had no children but provided a home for three of her nieces. In the 1880s, she campaigned for university education for women, and wrote a series of textbooks, the ‘Combined Class Series’. In the 1890s, she campaigned for better pay and pension rights for women teachers and actively supported ‘fresh air’ holidays for Aberdeen’s slum-dwelling children. St Paul Street School was extended several times before being demolished and rebuilt as a 1,000-pupil, mixed-sex Public Elementary in 1896. Isabella Skea retired in 1908. atm

• Aberdeen City Archives: school log books; Aberdeen Central Library, Local Studies collection: textbooks; Univ. of Aberdeen Local Collections: pamphlets. Aberdeen Daily Free Press, 10 Oct. 1881; Aberdeen Daily Journal, 24 Dec. 1908, 8 Oct. 1914; Aberdeen Journal, 31 Dec. 1896, 18 Oct. 1897; Aberdeen Today, 1907; Moore, L. (1991) Bajanellas and Semilinas; Northcroft, D. (2003) Scots at School. SKELTON, Pamela (Pam) Dora,‡ n. Haigh, born Sheffield 20 April 1938, died Edinburgh 7 Dec. 2014. Priest, pastor, teacher, women’s rights campaigner. Daughter of Elsie Jones, café owner, and Beldon Haigh, professional musician and piano teacher. Pam Haigh left school at 15 and worked as a junior clerk and receptionist, supporting herself to gain qualifications to train as a teacher, and subsequently teaching in secondary and primary schools in Hull, Sheffield and Weaverham. She married Arthur Skelton in 1962 and in 1973 they moved to

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Falkirk where their fourth child was born. A volunteer with the Samaritans and Women’s Aid, she was an active member of her local Scottish Episcopal Church, studied New Testament Greek, and was the first woman to complete the Edinburgh Diocese non-stipendiary ministry course. In 1978 she was the first woman ordained as a practising deaconess in the Scottish Episcopal Church, and in 1982 became the first deaconess-in-charge of a parish, at St Barnabas, Edinburgh. She also began pioneering work as Edinburgh Diocesan Youth Organiser (1982–91). Pam Skelton was a founder member of the group, later known as Movement for Whole Ministry, which supported women’s ordination and challenged the church to be more holistic and inclusive. In 1986 she was ordained deacon, and on 17 December 1994 became one of the first women priests in Scotland. In 2000 she was made ­honorary canon of St Mary’s Cathedral, Edinburgh. As Associate Minister, Christ Church Morningside (1991–97), she established a drop-in centre for people with mental-health issues and became Anglican Chaplain to the Royal Edinburgh Hospital (1992­–2005). HH • Church Times, 16 Jan. 2015 (obit); Directory 2007/2008, Scottish Episcopal Church, p. 289; The Edge, Diocese of Edinburgh in the Scottish Episcopal Church, Spring 2015, p. 15; The Scotsman 19 Dec. 2014 (obit.). SKENE, Lilias, n. Gillespie, born Kirkcaldy 1626/7, died Aberdeen 21 June 1697. Quaker author, prophet, poet. Daughter of Lilias Simson, and John Gillespie, minister of Kirkcaldy. Lilias Gillespie’s father, grandfathers, and two famous covenanting brothers, Patrick (1617–75) and George Gillespie (1613–48), were ministers. By her own account she was devout from an early age. In 1646, she married Alexander Skene (1621–93), later a burgh magistrate and authority on Scottish urban government, and moved to Aberdeen. Between 1647 and 1665 she bore ten children, seven surviving. Her eldest son, John Skene (c. 1649–90), became deputy governor of West New Jersey, and possibly America’s first freemason. In 1666, she converted to Quakerism, six years before her husband. She marked the change by adopting his surname, contrary to Scottish custom but in keeping with the English forms of the Society of Friends. Quakers afforded women public roles: Lilias Skene served on disciplinary committees and in 1682 helped found Scotland’s first Quaker school at Aberdeen. In 1677, she travelled to London on

Quaker business, but declined, for reasons unclear, an invitation to continue to Germany on a missionary tour with George Fox, William Penn, and fellow Scots Robert Barclay, George Keith and his wife Elizabeth Johnston. When Quaker men in Aberdeen were imprisoned between 1676 and 1679, Lilias attended to the prisoners and their businesses, and led outlawed meetings for worship. She was not arrested, but the Privy Council increased her husband’s fine by half to account for her ‘transgressions’ (NRS: CH10/3/35, f. 23). Writing was at the heart of Lilias Skene’s activism. In poetry and prose she reworked personal experience for didactic effect, whether cautionary or inspirational. Her surviving or known prose dates from the crisis of 1676–9, when she joined the literary campaign to win the prisoners’ release and gain toleration for Friends. To that end, she wrote a series of letters, now lost, to Elisabeth, Princess of the Rhine (cousin of Charles II), and in 1677 addressed a stinging prophetic sermon (published in 1753) to the magistrates of Aberdeen, demanding that they let her people go. In 1678, she responded to a Presbyterian critic by publishing a letter of pious rebuke. Her poems date from 1665 until just before her death in 1697. In 1878, William Walker published selections from a manuscript since lost: his full transcription of all 33 poems survives in his papers at the University of Aberdeen. gd • Univ. of Aberdeen Library Historic Collections: MS 2774, William Walker Papers; NRS: CH10/3/35, ‘. . . the Most Material Passages . . . Of Sufferings and Persecution at Aberdene’; CH10/3/36, ‘. . . Record of the First Rise and Progress of . . . Quakerism, In and About Aberdeen’. Skene, L. (1679) ‘An expostulatory epistle’, in R. Barclay, Robert Barclay’s Apology For the True Christian Divinity Vindicated . . ..; writings in J. Besse, (1753) A Collection of the Sufferings of the People Called Quakers, ii, pp. 522–3. DesBrisay, G. (2004) ‘Lilias Skene: a Quaker poet and her “Cursed Self ”’, in S. Dunnigan et al. (eds) Woman and the Feminine in Medieval and Early Modern Scottish Writing (Bibl.); ECSWW; *ODNB (2004); Walker, W. (1887) The Bards of Bon-Accord, 1375–1860.

n. Parrot, born London 17 Nov. 1912, died Inverness 9 August 1996. Communist activist and councillor. Daughter of Fred Parrot, shopkeeper, and his wife. One of ten children, Mabel Parrot came to Inverness from the Midlands in 1930 to work as a domestic servant. In 1936, she married Tom Skinner, a panel beater, and they moved to West

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Molesey in Surrey. They had four children. Mabel Skinner joined the CPGB in 1941, became secretary of Molesey Branch and sat on the Women’s Advisory Council (later Committee) in the 1940s. During the war they sent their children to stay in the Merkinch area of Inverness and settled there themselves in 1947. She became Secretary of the local CP branch from the late 1940s and sat on the Scottish Committee of the CPGB (1966–76). Having stood as a candidate seven times, Mabel Skinner finally won a council seat in May 1968, the first Communist councillor on Inverness Town Council. She was Convener of Social Work and played a major role in getting a community centre for the Merkinch area. She worked in shops, such as Lipton’s, and was an organiser for USDAW. She was also involved in the Anti-Apartheid Movement, CND and the Scotland-USSR Society and was active during the miners’ strike of 1984–5. Her cultural interests included membership of Inverness Musical Society and An Comunn Gaidhealach and she was on the board of the 7:84 Theatre Company. nr • SOHC, Mabs Skinner interview (with author) 15 April 1994, Inverness; Questionnaire returned to author 1994; Telephone interview between Tom Skinner and author 24 March 1998. Aberdeen Press and Journal, 13 August 1996 (obit.); Election leaflet, 1965 (copy courtesy of Frieda Gostwick); Inverness Courier, 13 August 1996 (obit.); Morning Star, 25 March 1970; Rafeek, N. C. (2008) Communist Women in Scotland: Red Clydeside from the Russian Revolution to the end of the Soviet Union; The Scotsman, 13 Aug. 1996 (obit.).

rider and sniper, and was commended three times for bravery in dispatches to the GPO. On 26 April she was shot three times and severely wounded. Although interrogated, she avoided arrest, and returned to Scotland. Her memoir, Doing My Bit for Ireland, was published in New York in 1917. Back in Dublin by 1919, working for the ITGWU, she fought in the Irish War of Independence and with anti-treaty forces during the Irish Civil War. As IRA Paymaster-General, she was arrested in 1922 for possessing a revolver, and spent eleven months in Mountjoy prison. In 1925, her Military Service Pension application was refused, as she was not a soldier in ‘the masculine sense’. She would not receive her pension until 1938. From about 1928, Margaret Skinnider taught at Irish Sisters of Charity National School. She joined the Irish National Teachers’ Organisation (INTO) and long campaigned for equal pay, pensions, training and status for all teachers, becoming INTO Vice-President (1955–6) and President (1956–7). She was buried in a Republican plot in Glasnevin Cemetery. KL • Glasnevin Cemetery, ‘Margaret Skinnider’, www.glasnevintrust.ie/visit-glasnevin/interactive-map/margaret-skinnider Military Service Pensions Collection (MSPC), ‘MSP34REF19910: Margaret Skinnider, 1P724’. Skinnider, M. (1917) Doing My Bit for Ireland. Lusk, K. (2016) ‘Introduction’ in Doing My Bit for Ireland; Lusk, K. and Maley, W. (eds) (2016) Scotland and the Easter Rising; White, L. W. (2009) ‘Skinnider, Margaret’, Dictionary of Irish Biography.

SKINNIDER, Margaret (Ní Scineadóra, Máighréad),‡

born Coatbridge 28 May 1892, died Dublin 10 Oct. 1971. Schoolteacher, suffragette, sniper during the Easter Rising, trade unionist. Daughter of Jane Doud, weaver, from Barrhead, and James Skinnider, stonemason, from Monaghan. As a maths teacher in Glasgow, Margaret Skinnider was a militant suffragette, participating in the Perth prison protests in 1914. Concurrently she was involved in raids for arms with the Irish Volunteers and trained at a Glasgow rifle club, becoming an excellent shot. In 1915, having been invited to Dublin by Countess Markievicz, she smuggled across bomb detonators in her hat. In Dublin she tested explosives and practised shooting, disguised as a boy. During the Easter Rising of 1916, as a member of the Irish Citizen Army and Cumann na mBan, Margaret Skinnider fought as dispatch

born Gilcomston, Aberdeen, 2 Dec. 1848, died Use Ikot Oku, Nigeria, 13 Jan. 1915. Missionary. Daughter of Mary Mitchell, weaver, and Robert Slessor, shoemaker. Mary Slessor, the second of seven children, had a childhood scarred by her father’s alcoholism, which cost him his job in Aberdeen. The family moved to Dundee in 1859, where the burden of providing for them all fell on Mary and her mother after the deaths of three of her siblings. From the age of 11, Mary Slessor was a half-timer in Baxter’s mill and at 14 she was weaving 12 hours a day at the power loom. Her formal education took place mainly in factory schools; she was largely self-taught. Her mother, deeply religious, sent the children to Sunday School at the United Presbyterian Church (UPC); she was interested in foreign missions, especially that of Calabar in SLESSOR, Mary Mitchell,

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West Africa. Mary Slessor graduated from Sunday School to Bible Class, becoming part of home missions and teaching in the Sabbath School. By her mid-20s she was an articulate and well-read Christian who had adopted the values of middleclass Victorian society. The death of David Livingstone (1873) and the wishes of her mother encouraged her to apply to the UPC Foreign Missions Board to train as a missionary. She set sail for Calabar, Nigeria, ‘the white man’s grave’, on 6 August 1876. Over the next 39 years she carved out a reputation as the most celebrated Scottish missionary since David Livingstone. In doing so, she pushed the boundaries of Victorian femininity and acceptable behaviour to the limits. The poverty of her upbringing allowed her to strike an immediate rapport with the peoples of Calabar, especially the women. She refused to wear a bonnet or shoes and learnt by ear the local Efik language. Her lifestyle played havoc with her health and she wrote of being covered in boils, her hair falling out and going temporarily blind. Although she never married, she was engaged for a time to another Scottish missionary, Charles Morrison. Mary Slessor pushed into the interior of the country in her attempt to Christianise native populations. She decided early on that if the ‘unacceptable’ aspects of Calabar tribal society, such as twin murder, drunkenness and ritual sacrifices, were to be eradicated, she had to co-operate with the imperial authorities. She adopted twins herself. In recognition of her work, in 1892 she was appointed British vice-consul of the Okoyong territory and in 1913 was elected an Honorary Associate, Order of St John of Jerusalem. Although she believed in the superiority of British values, it is not straightforward to consider her as contributing to the racism of 19th-century colonialism. In her view, British superiority lay only in the knowledge of God; once the Africans had embraced Christianity, that superiority would evaporate. She nurtured women’s independence and was the moving force in setting up industrial and farming settlements to provide training. Her work among the peoples of Calabar converted few to Christianity but her integrity left an enduring legacy encapsulated in her title there, ‘Mother of all the peoples’. In 2015, the bicentenary of her death, a memorial to Mary Slessor was unveiled in Union Terrace Gardens, Aberdeen. wwjk • Dundee City Archives: Letters; Dundee Museums and Art Galleries: Corr., diaries, papers.

Buchan, J. (1980) The Expendable Mary Slessor ; DWT; Knox, W. W. J. (2006) The Lives of Scottish Women; Livingstone, W. P. (1915) Mary Slessor of Calabar ; McEwan, C. (2000) Gender, Geography and Empire: Victorian women travellers in West Africa; ODNB (2004). SMALL, Ann Hunter (Annie), born Redding, near Falkirk, 26 Dec. 1857, died Edinburgh 7 Feb. 1945. Missionary and college principal. Daughter of Nathina Hunter and the Rev. John Small, Free Church of Scotland missionaries in Poona. Annie Small spent her childhood in Arbroath, in India and at school in London then, aged 19, returned to Poona as a missionary in her own right. She developed a great love of Indian people, culture and languages, and became highly regarded for her knowledge of Indian religions and musical traditions. Unusually perceptive about the imperial pretensions of Victorian Britain, she later reflected: ‘I criticised hotly our British acquisitiveness, restlessness, our talk of commerce while intending conquest, our hypocritical profession of desire for the good of India’ (Wyon 1953, p. 194). Poor health forced her to return to Scotland in 1892. She was somewhat disillusioned at the state of church life, especially the official disregard of women, which she thought bordered on contempt. An opportunity to challenge this arose when the Women’s Foreign Mission Committee invited her to become principal of the new Women’s Missionary College (WMC), later St Colm’s College, to provide specialised mission training for women. Annie Small thereafter demonstrated practical commitment to overcoming divisions and injustice in church and community. From 1894 to 1913 she led a pioneering institution, offering for the first time anywhere in the world dedicated professional education for female missionaries. She developed an innovative curriculum, based on progressive scholarship, methods and practical work, and in the context of an encouraging residential community. The WMC attracted students from many countries and became a model institution, commended by the 1910 Edinburgh World Missionary Conference – a key ecumenical event at which Annie Small and the college were active and influential. She combined passion for her Scottish Presbyterian heritage with an ecumenical spirit, rooted in her love of Iona. Always open to new ideas, she engaged passionately with key issues – not least the place of women in church and society.

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After retirement, she experimented in models of community living, maintained a worldwide circle of friends, and went on writing and lecturing into her 70s. A commonsense visionary, she called for women to be unconventional explorers in the service of the gospel. lo • St Colm’s International House, Edinburgh: St Colm’s Collection (archives of WMC). NLS: Acc. 13301, St Colm’s College Archive; Small, A. H. (1944) The Church of Scotland Women’s Missionary College, St Colm’s, Edinburgh; St Colm’s International House, Edinburgh: St Colm’s Collection (archives of WMC). Small, A. H. (1944) The Church of Scotland Women’s Missionary College, St Colm’s, Edinburgh. Macdonald, L. A. O. (2000) A Unique and Glorious Mission; ODNB (2004) (Bibl.); Stewart, M. (1972) Training in Mission; Wyon, O. (1953) The Three Windows: the life of Annie Hunter Small. SMITH, Ann Lorrain (Annie), OBE, born Everton, Lancs., 23 Oct. 1854, died Kensington, London, 7 Sept. 1937. Lichenologist, mycologist. Daughter of Margaret Lorrain Brown, and the Rev. Walter Smith. In 1848, Annie Smith’s father, Free Church minister at Half Morton, Dumfriesshire, had been translated to St Peter’s (Scotch) Church, Liverpool. The family returned to Half Morton in 1856. Annie, the fourth of their nine children, may have had her interest in botany kindled by the Rev. J. C. Meiklejohn, a friend of her father. After 1888, Annie L. Smith became a paid but ‘unofficial worker’ (women could not be on the permanent staff ) in the Cryptogamic Herbarium in the botanical department of the BM (Natural History). Apart from a short period when she assisted Dr William Carruthers of Moffat with studies in seed testing, her connection with the Herbarium was unbroken up to her 80th birthday. The first woman president of the British Mycological Society (1907) and a council member of the Linnean Society (1918–21), she completed a Monograph of British Lichens (started by the Rev. J. Crombie), which became a standard work (1911, 1918, 1926). Her Handbook of British Lichens (1921) provided a key for the identification of species, while her major publication, Lichens (1921, re-pub. 1975), included anthropological and ecological notes as well as taxonomic data. Annie L. Smith became recognised as the British authority on lichens, contributing many records and articles to journals about these and other cryptogams. On her retirement in 1934, she was awarded the OBE. ems

• Smith, A. L., Works as above. Ainsworth, G. C. (1996) in J. Webster and D. Moore (eds) Brief Biographies of British Mycologists; Dumfries & Galloway Standard, 15 Sept. 1937; Ewing, Rev. W. (ed.) (1914) Annals of the Free Church of Scotland: 1843–1900; Gepp, A. and Rendle, A. B. (1937) Jour. Bot. Lond. 75, (obit.); Liverpool Record Office; ODNB (2004) (place and d.o.b. corrected here). Private information: written family record. SMITH, Anne Glen Millar,

born Leven, Fife 10 Oct. 1944, died St Monans, Fife 12 May 2013. Scholar, writer, editor, founder of The Literary Review. Daughter of Marion Cunningham, and Norman Davidson Smith, aircraft repair fitter. Having left Buckhaven School at 15 to work as a dental nurse and supplement the family income, Anne Smith went on to higher education, a PhD (on ‘The Novel of Factory Life, 1832–55’) and a post at Edinburgh University, where by 1979 she was Head of English. When in that year the Times Literary Supplement was silenced by a printers’ strike, the robust, working-class Fifer saw an opportunity, and in 1980 committed her savings to the launch of a new literary magazine. She first wrote to some celebrated novelists to ask if they would write, unpaid, for its debut edition. ‘I think,’ she said, when Doris Lessing and A. S. Byatt obliged, ‘they were mesmerised by my special brand of impertinence.’ The Literary Review’s editor, working singlehandedly from her flat in Edinburgh, was determined to confront the ‘ho-hum/English complacent school of thought’ and the academic cliques and reviewers’ cartels which dominated literary journalism in London. For a time she succeeded, but when her funds ran out she sought backing from the publisher Naim Attallah, continuing as editor until he sacked her after a policy argument. The Literary Review has been embedded in literary London ever since but continues to credit Anne Smith as its founding editor. She continued to write, review and edit, but never produced a successor to her award-winning novel The Magic Glass (1981). In 1989, Routledge published her oral history, Women Remember, while with Iain Finlayson she co-edited Chambers Dictionary of Scottish Quotations. In the same year, she moved to Glasgow to become chief executive of Book Trust Scotland, where she remained until ill health forced her retirement. JWD

• Smith, A., Works as above. The Literary Review, July 2013 (obit.); The Scotsman, 3 March 1980, profile: ‘New Town tilt at the London literati’.

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SMITH SMITH, Christina, n. Menzies, born Glenlyon, Perthshire c. 25 July 1809, died Mount Gambier, South Australia 28 April 1893. Teacher, missionary and author. Daughter of Catherine McNaughton, and James Menzies, tenant farmer. Christina Menzies married Finlay Stewart c. 1830, bearing one son, Duncan. Widowed, she migrated to Melbourne with two brothers and Duncan in 1839, working as a housekeeper, taking in lodgers, and assisting the Stranger’s Friend Society. Meeting with Indigenous peoples, she yearned ‘to raise them to a better life. I pray the Lord may use me as a means of reclaiming some of them’ and visited those imprisoned. She married James Smith, schoolmaster, on 19 Oct. 1841, and bore eight children. In 1845 they moved to Rivoli Bay, on the South Australian frontier. The first white woman there, she befriended the Buandig Aboriginal people, seeking to convert them and to protect them from rapacious settlers. At Mount Gambier, from 1854, the couple ran a home and school for Aboriginal orphans, until James’s death in 1860. From 1865 to 1868 these were financed by Angela Burdett Coutts; from 1868 Christina Smith maintained the Aboriginal Home herself. Colonial violence and illness were decimating the Buandig. At their request, Christina Smith and Duncan Smith, the official interpreter, documented their world and language. Christina Smith’s 1880 publication The Booandik Tribe of South Australian Aborigines: a sketch of their habits, customs, legends, and language, written in an evangelical mode, is the key source on the Buandig. She assisted anthropologist Alfred Howitt in his research on Aboriginal culture and society. MA

• State Library of South Australia: Private Record Group 144, Smith Family: Papers of the Smith family of Rivoli Bay and Mount Gambier; D 2609 (L), Notebook of Duncan Stewart 1853–4. Smith, Mrs J., Work as above. Haggis, J. (2001) ‘The social memory of a colonial frontier’, Australian Feminist Studies, 16 (34), pp. 91–9; MacGillivray, L. G. (2005) ‘Smith, Christina (1809–1893)’, ADB; Nettelbeck, A. (2001) ‘“Seeking to spread the truth”: Christina Smith and the South Australian Frontier’, Australian Feminist Studies 16 (34), pp. 83–90. Display at Lady Nelson Discovery and Visitor Centre, 35 Jubilee Highway East, Mount Gambier, South Australia. SMITH, [Elizabeth] Dorothea Chalmers, n. Lyness (Lynas), born Glasgow 1872, died Glasgow 21

May 1944. Pioneer doctor and militant suffragette. Daughter of Lavinia Bannister, and William Crawford Lyness, property owner and merchant.

Among the first cohort of female medical students at Queen Margaret Medical School, opened in 1890, Dorothea Lyness graduated MB from the University of Glasgow in 1894, and worked in the Glasgow Samaritan Hospital for Women. On 16 June 1899 she married the Rev. William Chalmers Smith (1864–1935), Minister of Calton Parish Church in the East End of the city. They had four daughters (two of whom became doctors) and two sons. Dorothea and her younger sister Jane developed an active interest in the women’s suffrage campaign, and she joined the militant WSPU in 1912. On 24 July 1913, Dorothea Chalmers Smith and her audacious accomplice, *Ethel Moorhead, were apprehended with fire-lighting equipment in a mansion house at 6 Park Gardens. Arrested and held on remand at Duke Street Prison, they went on hunger strike. After five days, she was released under the Cat and Mouse Act, but did not return to the jail when her licence expired. She was later found at Tighnabruich, indicted and released on bail to appear at the High Court on 15 October. At the trial, the women calmly declared their intention to defend themselves against the charge of housebreaking with intent to set fire. They were found guilty and sentenced to eight months imprisonment amid chaotic scenes as supporters shouted, ‘Shame! Shame!’ and threw apples. After five days on hunger strike, Dorothea Chalmers Smith was discharged under licence to return home. To her husband’s dismay, police placed the house under 24-hour watch after she failed to return to prison as required. She escaped on 19 November and was never apprehended. Her notoriety proved too much for the Kirk Session of Calton Parish Church, who demanded that the minister either control or divorce his wife. Unlike some other clergymen married to suffragettes, William Chalmers Smith was less than supportive of his wife’s actions, and Dorothea ­eventually left him. After the divorce, she was forbidden to see her sons, who remained with their father. Dorothea Chalmers Smith successfully resumed her career as a doctor, specialising in childcare and public health, and was remembered fondly in Glasgow for her medical work and her kindness. lo • AGC; HHGW; SS. Private information. SMITH, Janet Buchanan Adam, OBE, m1 Roberts, m2 Carleton, born Glasgow 9 Dec. 1905, died

London 11 Sept. 1999. Biographer, critic and 398

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anthologist. Daughter of Lilian Buchanan, and George Adam Smith, Presbyterian minister and academic. Janet Adam Smith, the sixth child in her family, was brought up in Aberdeen, where her father was university principal. A childhood friend was *Janet Teissier du Cros, n. Grierson. She was educated at Cheltenham Ladies’ College and Somerville College, Oxford (BA 1927). She began work with the BBC in 1928 and was assistant editor of The Listener (1930–5), meeting the young poets of the day and compiling an anthology of their work, Poems of Tomorrow (1935). She puzzled Lord Reith, BBC Director-General, by publishing a W. H. Auden poem which he found incomprehensible. In 1935, she married the poet Michael Roberts (1902–1948), who shared her love of mountain-climbing, and moved to Newcastle, where he was a teacher. During wartime evacuation to Penrith, housebound with young children (they briefly shared the house with poet *Kathleen Raine), she wrote Mountain Holidays (1946) about her climbing experiences. Later, they moved to London. Michael Roberts developed leukemia and died in 1948. Janet Adam Smith brought up her four children in a home which was also an intellectual centre for her friends. In 1949, she resumed her journalistic career with the New Statesman and was its literary editor (1952–60), becoming a freelance writer and broadcaster in 1960. She married John Carleton (1908–74), a headmaster, in 1965. She pioneered the critical study of Robert Louis Stevenson through a biography (1937), critical editions of his correspondence with Henry James (1950), and his poetry (1950, 1971). Among her numerous publications are John Buchan: a biography (1965), the standard biography for many years, and the anthologies The Faber Book of Children’s Verse (1953) and The Faber Book of Comic Verse (rev. edn. 1974, originally edited by Michael Roberts). Her critical writings included reviews for journals, including The New York Review of Books. She collaborated in the translation of several mountaineering memoirs. A past president of the Ladies’ Alpine Club, she was one of the first women to be a committee member of the Alpine Club. She was vice-president (1978–80) and elected an honorary member in 1993. She was a trustee of the NLS (1950–85) and president of the Royal Literary Fund (1976–84). She received an honorary degree of LLD from the University of Aberdeen in 1962 and was made OBE in 1982. MARB

• Smith, J. B. Adam, Works as above and see The New York Review of Books (Bibl.): www.nybooks.com/authors ‘Michael Roberts’, www.online.northumbria.ac.uk/faculties/ art/humanities/cns/m-roberts.html; ODNB (2004); The Scotsman, 14 Sept. 1999, The Times, 13 Sept. 1999 (obits). SMITH, Madeleine Hamilton, m. Wardle, born Glasgow 29 March 1835, died New York, USA, 28 April 1928. Defendant in murder trial. Daughter of Elizabeth Hamilton, and James Smith, architect. Madeleine Smith grew up in Glasgow, the daughter of a prosperous architect. She went to school in London 1851–3, and returned to a busy social life both in the city and at the family’s country home at Rhu on the Clyde. Early in 1855, she met Emile L’Angelier (c. 1826–57), a warehouse clerk from Jersey, and they began a secret relationship. About 250 of Madeleine Smith’s letters to her ‘dear sweet pet of a husband’ survive. The couple continued to meet and correspond clandestinely after her parents had forbidden any marriage on the grounds of Emile L’Angelier’s financial and social unsuitability. However, by early 1857 she had agreed to marry William Minnoch, a family friend, and asked L’Angelier to return her letters. He refused, and continued to meet her at the family house in Blythswood Square. In the early hours of 23 March 1857, he died suddenly at his lodgings of arsenic poisoning. Madeleine Smith was arrested for his murder: the trial, which took place in July 1857, was a national sensation. Her youth, appearance and social status excited great interest; but the greatest furore was caused by the uninhibited nature of the letters read out in court. The prosecution was unable to show that she had had the opportunity to give L’Angelier the arsenic that killed him, and to public jubilation the jury returned a verdict of Not Proven. After returning briefly to Rhu, Madeleine Smith went to live in England and married George Wardle in London in July 1861. They settled in Bloomsbury and had two children. Through Wardle’s work as a close associate of William Morris, they moved in circles that included Rossetti, Burne Jones and Bernard Shaw. Madeleine Wardle became an active socialist and served on committees with, among others, Eleanor Marx. The Wardle marriage broke down in about 1890, and in 1893 she went to New York, where her son had already settled and where she lived for a further 35 years. eg/gmn

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and in membership of the Scottish Reconstruction Committee. In the 1950s, she made significant contributions to the Third Statistical Account of Scotland. Her later work focused upon Scottish nationalism and the geography and politics of selfgovernment. cw

• NRS: JC 26/1031/1, Letters of Madeleine Smith to Emile L’ Angelier. Gordon, E. and Nair, G. (2009) Murder and Morality in Victorian Britain: the story of Madeleine Smith; Hartman, M. S. (1972–3) ‘Murder for respectability: the case of Madeleine Smith’, Victorian Studies, 16; Knox, W. W. J. (2006) The Lives of Scottish Women; MacGowan, D. (1999) Murder in Victorian Scotland: the trial of Madeleine Smith; ODNB (2004).

n. Duncan, born Aberdeen 1815, died Ripon 24 March 1896. Amateur geologist and astronomical observer. Daughter of Jannet Young, and Thomas Duncan, lawyer. Brought up in Clova near Rhynie, Aberdeenshire, Jessie Duncan later attended the geology courses of Alexander Rose in Edinburgh, which included field excursions, and embarked on geological tours in England, Ireland, and continental Europe. Through her scientific interests she met Charles Piazzi Smyth (1819–1900), the brilliant, if eccentric, Astronomer Royal for Scotland and professor at the University of Edinburgh. They married on Christmas Day, 1854. Thereafter she was his indispensable amanuensis on astronomical expeditions abroad: to Tenerife on a pioneering test of ‘mountain astronomy’, to Egypt for a survey of the Great Pyramid, and to Mediterranean locations to observe the sun. A modest person whose name is rarely mentioned in the formal reports, her contribution to science was subsumed under that of her husband. mtb

SMYTH, Jessica Piazzi (Jessie),

• Library of the Royal Observatory Edinburgh: Archives. Brück, H. A. and Brück, M. T. (1988) The Peripatetic Astronomer: the life of Charles Piazzi Smyth; Brück, M. T. (2009) Women in Early British and Irish Astronomy: stars and satellites; ODNB (2004) (Smyth, Charles Piazzi). SNODGRASS, Catherine Park, born Bonnyrigg 17 July 1902, died Edinburgh 13 Dec. 1974. Geographer, planner and political commentator. Educated at Eskbank Girls’ School, George Watson’s Ladies’ College and St George’s School in Edinburgh, Catherine Snodgrass graduated MA from the University of Edinburgh in 1924 and obtained her PhD in 1931 for work on Scotland’s physical environment and agriculture. She lectured in geography at the University of Edinburgh from 1936 to 1957. Her work, undeservedly neglected, falls into three broad periods and types. In the late 1930s and early 1940s she concentrated upon land use planning, culminating in involvement with L. Dudley Stamp’s Land Utilisation Survey

• Univ. of Edinburgh, Department of Geography Archives: Snodgrass Papers (DG 6). Snodgrass, C. (1946) ‘Part 30: Fife’ in L. D. Stamp (ed.) Land of Britain: the report of the Land Utilisation Survey, (1953) ‘East Lothian’ and ‘Edinburgh’ in Third Statistical Account of Scotland, (1960) Scotland in the Modern World: a plea for freedom, self-government and full participation (1974). Scottish Geographical Magazine, 91 (2), pp. 128–9 (obit.). SNOWDON, The Princess Margaret Rose, CI, GCVO, GCStJ, Countess of, born Glamis Castle 21 Aug. 1930, died London 9 Feb. 2002. Daughter of Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon (see *Elizabeth, Queen and Queen Mother), and Albert, Duke of York (later King George VI). Margaret’s position was transformed when her father unexpectedly became king in 1936, on his brother’s abdication. She and her elder sister, later HM Queen Elizabeth, were educated by their Scottish governess *Marion Crawford. A lively little girl, her later role in the ‘Princess Margaret set’, whose activities and relationships were much reported in the press, created the image of a somewhat wayward member of the royal family. Her life illustrates the difficulties of being close to the throne. Her love for Group Captain Peter Townsend, her father’s equerry but a divorcé, caused a constitutional crisis: could Elizabeth, as Queen and Head of the Anglican Church, permit the marriage? In 1955, Princess Margaret released a public statement to say she would not marry Capt. Townsend. In 1960, she married photographer Antony Armstrong-Jones (1930–2017, Earl of Snowdon 1961). With their two children, David and Sarah, they lived in London, mixing with celebrities in music, arts and fashion. The marriage ended in divorce in 1978, and Princess Margaret’s private life was then and later the subject of press scrutiny. In her middle years, however, she was patron of more than eight associations, being particularly fond of the ballet and the arts. In later years, she spent much time on the Caribbean island of Mustique, carrying out fewer public engagements. She also suffered from poor health, associated with smoking and drinking, had a bad scalding accident, and several strokes. Among her Scottish links, she was Colonel-in-Chief of the

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Royal Highland Fusiliers (Princess Margaret’s Own Glasgow and Ayrshire regiment), which provided the pall-bearers at her funeral. FJ

Lai, S. (ed.) (2003) Gathering Momentum: Chinese Arts Centre Commission Scheme.

• Crawford, M. (1991 rev. edn.) The Little Princesses; The Guardian, 9 Feb., 11 Feb. 2002 (obit.); Scotland on Sunday, 10 Feb. 2002 (obit.); Heald, T. (2007) Princess Margaret: a life unravelled; eODNB (see ‘Margaret Rose, Princess’); Warwick, C. (2002) Princess Margaret.

SOMERVILLE, Euphemia Gilchrist,

born Glasgow 21 Sept. 1947, died Irvine 17 Feb. 2010. Multimedia artist, photographer. Daughter of Evelyn Yih, telephonist, and Pak So, surgeon. Pamela So was a pioneering artist whose work explored Scottish Chinese heritage and culture in photography, film and sculptural works, often based on her family history. Her grandmother was part of a group that had walked from Hubei province to Europe in the early twentieth century, selling paper flowers and performing acrobatics. She herself grew up in one of the first three Chinese families in Glasgow, and she later incorporated her father’s amateur photos and films of family life in Scotland into her work. After a Geography degree and work as a librarian, Pamela So graduated from GSA’s Environmental Art Department as a mature student in 1998. She worked with a range of materials. ‘Love is a many splendoured thing’ (2000) subtly explored sexual politics through Chinese dolls. In a residency in Syracuse, she used Barbie dolls with a backdrop of Coney Island (‘Barbie as Tatiana’, 2002). Influenced by trade between Britain and China, a series of works incorporated tea, rice and Chinese garments, and later paper flowers, referencing Chinoiserie discovered in the V&A. Pamela So worked hard to support Chinese contemporary cultural endeavours and helped develop Glasgow’s Ricefield Chinese Arts and Cultural Centre (2004), exhibiting there and in other Scottish galleries and venues. Her many solo and group exhibitions in Britain, Morocco and China focused on interrogations of the domestic, widening its frame of reference to analyse landscapes and postcolonialism. Pamela So was married three times: to Christopher Thomson (1970–82); James Hardie (2001–7); and James Thomson (from 2007). She had two ­children. AP

SO, Pamela Hung,

• Centre for Chinese Contemporary Art (formally Chinese Art Centre), and GWL: research materials. So, P. H. (2005/6) Re:Collections; The Collector’s Garden; The Collector’s Landscape (Collins Gallery, University of Strathclyde and Crawford Art Centre, St Andrews).

n. Gibb, born Dollar 19 Sept. 1860, died Edinburgh 27 Sept. 1935. Councillor and campaigner on health and welfare issues. Daughter of Margaret Scott McMinn, and William Gibb, draper. Euphemia Gibb was educated at Dollar Academy. In 1893 she married Alexander Somerville (1841/2–1907), retired East India merchant and widower with three daughters; they had three more children. After his death in 1907, the family moved to Edinburgh. Having organised voluntary health visitors for Glasgow City Council, Euphemia Somerville was asked to develop a similar scheme in Edinburgh and in 1908 started the Edinburgh Voluntary Health Workers’ Association. Elected to Edinburgh Council for Merchiston Ward in 1919 as an Independent, she was supported by the EWCA, of which she was an active member. Only the second woman councillor in the city, she held her seat until her death. She spent a month in the Craiglockhart Poorhouse, to ‘obtain first-hand information on this side of Social Service’ (A Child Lover, p. 11), and later took a social work diploma at the University of Edinburgh. She became the city’s second woman bailie, or magistrate, in 1932, and was particularly concerned about prostitution. In 1928 she launched the Edinburgh Welfare Housing Trust to build homes for the poor. Accounts hint that her determination over housing, particularly slum clearance, bordered on the obsessive. It was said that ‘the vast new housing schemes that now detract from the landscape around Edinburgh’ were her reward (The Scotsman 1935) – an ambiguous legacy but a response to contemporary housing conditions. She pioneered progressive approaches to the care and treatment of the mentally ill and disabled, but was best known for the toddlers’ playgrounds, which offered supervision, ‘exercise, fresh air, and happy occupation’ (A Child Lover, p. 18). Euphemia Somerville also campaigned for council nursery schools. The first, built in 1930, is still open. She was inspired by ‘practical Christianity’ and her experience of child poverty in Glasgow was said to be the motivation for all her work. SI

• Anon. (1937) A Child Lover; Innes, S. (1998) ‘Love and work: feminism, family and ideas of equality and citizenship, Britain 1900–1939’, PhD, Univ. of Edinburgh;

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SOMERVILLE *ODNB (2004); Stewart, J. (1925) ‘Kindergarten schools’, in Edinburgh Corporation Education Committee, Organisation of Education in Edinburgh, chapter XI, pp. 76–7; The Scotsman, 28 Sept. 1935 (obit.); The Scotsman, 1 Dec. 1937. SOMERVILLE, Mary, n. Fairfax, m1 Greig, m2 Somerville, born Jedburgh 26 Dec. 1780, died

Naples 29 Nov. 1872. Writer on science. Daughter of Margaret Charters, and Lieutenant (later ViceAdmiral) William George Fairfax. Mary Fairfax was born in the manse at Jedburgh, where her maternal aunt was wife of the minister, the Rev. Dr Thomas Somerville. Her father being at sea and her mother unwell after her confinement, Mary was suckled by her aunt (later her mother-in-law). The four Fairfax children were brought up in Burntisland in a house which is still standing. In her Personal Recollections, Mary Somerville describes her childhood, schooling and early life in Fife, Musselburgh and Edinburgh. Her unconventional desire to learn geometry, algebra and the classics was already well established, though not encouraged, by 1804, when she married her cousin, Samuel Greig (1778–1807), son of Admiral Sir Samuel Greig, who had gone to Russia in 1763 to organise Catherine II’s navy. Samuel junior, who was Russian consul in London, died, aged 29, leaving his wife with two young children. Widowed and back in her parents’ home, she had the means and the independence to pursue her studies, with guidance from Scottish mathematicians, before her second marriage in 1812 to another cousin, William Somerville (1771–1860), an army doctor. This was a happier union than the first. After a brief period in Edinburgh, the family settled in London where William became Physician at Chelsea Hospital (1819). Over the next two decades, the Somervilles played a significant part in the intellectual life of London: their acquaintance embraced the worlds of science, arts and politics. From 1840, the family spent most of their time in Italy, for William’s health. By then, Mary Somerville had embarked, in her late 40s, on her career as a writer on science. Her first work, the translation and English edition of La Mécanique Céleste by the French astronomer and mathematician, Pierre-Simon Laplace (1749–1827), was undertaken at the suggestion of Henry, Lord Brougham. The Mechanism of the Heavens was published in 1831 to general acclaim: this work, which could not have been translated without specialist k­ nowledge,

did much to assist the modernisation of mathematics in Britain, and was a recommended text in Cambridge. Mary Somerville’s most ambitious work was On the Connexion of the Physical Sciences (1834), which ran to nine British editions in her lifetime. This book, incorporating astronomy, physics, meteorology and geography, reached a wider non-specialist audience, but also assisted specialist research – the astronomer John Couch Adams said that a suggestion in that work inspired him to calculate the orbit of Neptune. James Clerk Maxwell described The Connexion as one of those ‘suggestive books, which put into definite, intelligible and communicable form, the guiding ideas that are clearly already working in the minds of men of science, so as to lead them to discoveries, but which they cannot yet shape into a definite statement’ (Maxwell 1890, p. 401). Mary Somerville’s Physical Geography (1848) also went through nine British editions and On Molecular and Microscopic Science (1869) was published when she was in her 80s. She down-played her achievement: ‘Although I had recorded in a clear point of view some of the most refined and difficult analytical processes and astronomical discoveries, I was conscious that I had never made a discovery myself, that I had no originality’ (Queen of Science, p. 145). In her personal life, Mary Somerville belied male fears that education made women unwomanly or narrow: she wrote for the press, taught her own small children, read widely and was very fond of society. Into extreme old age she remained tart about any assumption of female inferiority. Her politics were Liberal from early on; she advocated female education and supported female suffrage. She and her daughters sent their names from Italy for the 1866 suffrage petition presented to Parliament by John Stuart Mill, and in 1868 Mill solicited and received her signature for another petition, this time placing it first on the list. Her memoirs are remarkable for their wit and perception. When she died in Naples, obituaries appeared in newspapers and journals throughout Europe and America: the Morning Post obituary called her, with complete confidence, ‘the Queen of science’ (2 Dec. 1872). She had received numerous honours in her lifetime, and Somerville College, established in 1879 as the first women’s college in Oxford, was named after her. Her successful public life had its private tragedies: three of her six children died in childhood. It is hard, given all that was stacked against her, to speak too highly of Mary

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Somerville’s achievement: her life proved that Victorian women could understand science. DAM c M • NRA: Mary Somerville’s papers, various locations. www. nra.nationalarchives.gov.uk/nra Somerville, M. (2004) Collected Works, 9 vols, J. Secord (ed.); ‘Personal Recollections’, in D. McMillan (ed.) (2001) Queen of Science: the personal recollections of Mary Somerville, augmented from MSS. McKinlay, J. (1987) Mary Somerville, 1780–1872; Maxwell, J. C. (1890) Scientific Papers, ii, p. 401; Neely, K. (2001) Science, Illumination and the Female Mind; ODNB (2004); Patterson, E. C. (1983) Mary Somerville and the Cultivation of Science, 1815–1840. SOMERVILLE, Mary, OBE, born New Zealand 1 Nov. 1897, died Bath 1 Sept. 1963, m. (1) Brown, m. (2) Rowan Davies. BBC executive, school broadcasting pioneer. Daughter of Agnes Fleming, and Rev James Alexander Somerville. Mary Somerville spent her formative years in Roxburghshire, moving to Oxford in 1921. At Somerville College she became the centre of a literary circle and may have given up a potentially glittering writing career to join the BBC. At university, in 1924, she discovered the new medium of wireless. By chance she heard a trial broadcast for schools, which left her ‘exalted’ (Somerville 1947, p. 9) and she determined this would be her career. John Reith, Managing Director of the then two-year-old BBC, agreed that this ‘very clever and self-confident young lady’ (Reith 1924) should join the staff. She arrived at Savoy Hill, the BBC’s London headquarters, in 1925, as an assistant in the Education Department. Mary Somerville quickly became indispensable to school broadcasting. It was mainly at her instigation that broadcasts became more child-friendly, that supplementary materials were produced and that the Central Council for School Broadcasting was set up, in 1929, which established the link between external educational authorities and the BBC. The scope and number of programmes also increased considerably from a single 30-minute talk in 1925, to two hours each weekday by 1935, including the first for infants, Music and Movement, with thousands more schools listening in. Mary Somerville was unusual in being both a married professional woman and a mother. At a time when marriage bars were rife, she kept her job on marriage in 1928 and, on her son’s birth the following year, the BBC introduced maternity leave. In 1931, this ‘eager, restless, determined, irresistible pioneer’ (The Times 1963) was

confirmed as Director of School Broadcasting, a position she held until she requested a move in 1947. As Assistant Controller, Talks she introduced Listen with Mother. From 1950, until her retirement in 1955, she was Controller, Talks, the first woman at the BBC to reach this executive level. Amongst Mary Somerville’s colleagues was fellow Oxford graduate Isa Benzie (1902–88), from Glasgow, who joined the BBC as a secretary in 1927 and rose to become Foreign Director in 1933. Choosing to resign on marriage in 1938, Isa Benzie returned to the BBC in 1943 as a radio producer, specialising in health issues. She was instrumental in founding the Today programme in 1957, seven years before she retired. KM • BBC Written Archives Centre, Caversham Park: L2/195/ 1–3, Mary Somerville Staff File; L1/1049/1–2, Isa Benzie Staff File; S60/5/1/3, Reith Diaries, 11 April 1924. Somerville, M. (1947), ‘How school broadcasting began’, in Palmer, R. School Broadcasting in Britain. Murphy, K. (2016) Behind the Wireless: an early history of women at the BBC; ODNB (2004); The Times, 6 Sept. 1963 (obit.). SOULE, Caroline Augusta, n. White, born Albany, New York 3 Sept. 1824, died Shawlands, Glasgow 6 Dec. 1903. Writer, Universalist missionary to Scotland, first woman ordained as a minister in the UK. Daughter of Elizabeth Merselis, and Nathaniel White, mechanic. Educated at Albany Female Academy, Caroline White became unpaid principal of the girls’ department of a secondary school founded by the Universalist Church in Clinton, New York. She married Henry Birdsall Soule, a Universalist minister, in 1843 and had five children. She helped him edit the Connecticut Odd Fellow and wrote short stories for the Hartford Times and for Universalist magazines. Widowed in 1852, she returned to teaching, as well as editing and writing, including a biography of her husband (1852) and a collection of moral stories (1855). In 1854, to live less expensively, the family moved to a log cabin in Boonsboro, Iowa, where she wrote three novels, including Wine or Water (1862). She moved back to New York State in 1864 to have treatment for an eye problem. In 1869 she became a founder of the earliest national organisation of American church women, the Women’s Centenary Aid Association (WCA), serving as president until 1880. She preached her first sermon aged 49. Her first formal pastorate was in Elizabeth, New Jersey, in 1876.

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On holiday in 1875, Caroline Soule visited Scotland. She helped organise the Scottish Universalist Convention, preached and gave public lectures. In 1878, the WCA sent her to Scotland as their ‘evangel’ – the church’s first foreign missionary. She preached throughout the UK and worked in Dunfermline, before settling in Glasgow, where she established the St Paul’s Universalist Church. On 27 March 1880, she was ordained by the Scottish Universalist Convention, an ordination later acknowledged in the USA, where she assisted the WCA and preached 1882–6. Returning to Glasgow, she served her church of some 120 members (also acting as minister in Dundee 1886–7) until her retirement in 1892. SI • New York City Public Library: Caroline A. Soule Papers. American National Biography (1999); Hill, A. M. (2003) ‘The obscure mosaic of British Universalism: an outline’, Trans. Unit. Hist. Soc. 23/1, April; Notable American Women: a biographical dictionary (1971); Seaburg A. (1967) ‘Missionary to Scotland: Caroline Augusta Soule’, Trans. Unit. Hist. Soc. 14/1, Oct., ‘Caroline Soule’: www.uua.org/uuhs/duub/ articles/carolinesoule.html Additional information: Andrew M. Hill. SPARK, Muriel Sarah, n. Camberg,‡ DBE, C.Lit, FRSL, FRSE, born Edinburgh 1 Feb. 1918, died Florence 13 April 2006. Writer. Daughter of Sarah Elizabeth Maud (Cissy) Uezzell, pianoforte teacher, and Bernard Camberg, engineer. Muriel Spark, one of the most important novelists in English, author of twenty-two novels, four short-story collections, and varied other works, had begun by publishing poetry in James Gillespie’s school magazine. ‘Although most of my life has been devoted to fiction, I have always thought of myself as a poet’ (All the Poems 2004). Her precociousness was acknowledged by her beguiling Edinburgh teacher *Christina Kay, who inspired her most famous work, The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (1961), later adapted for stage, cinema and television. Family finances not stretching to university education, Muriel Camberg undertook a preciswriting course at Heriot-Watt College (D. Honoris Causa, 1995). In 1937 she followed teacher Sydney Oswald Spark (SOS) to Southern Rhodesia to marry. They had one son (Samuel aka Robin, 1938–2016). SOS was seriously unstable and the marriage was dissolved in 1943. In 1944, Muriel Spark returned alone to wartime Britain, hoping Robin could join her; he was eventually raised by her parents in Edinburgh.

Towards the end of the war, she worked in black propaganda at Milton Bryan (see The Hothouse by the East River, 1973). Moving to postwar London with her ration book, she lived in the Helena Club, a women’s lodging house which would inspire The Girls of Slender Means (1963). Taking a succession of temporary low-paid jobs, she began her career with poems, anthologies and especially biographies – of Mary Shelley and the Brontës among others. As secretary of the Poetry Society (1947–9), her innovations (such as paying poets) shook the establishment, including *Marie Stopes, and prompted her dismissal. When she suffered illness due to financial hardship and the side-effects of medication, her literary collaborator, Derek Stanford, organised assistance, including from Graham Greene. Stanford would later, however, write an inaccurate biography and sell her love-letters, a betrayal she satirised in A Far Cry from Kensington (1988). Having been born into a family with Jewish and Christian antecedents, Muriel Spark was received into the Roman Catholic Church in 1954. She supported her son’s embrace of Judaism, but a public controversy over the family’s Jewish identity led to painful estrangement from him in the 1990s. Muriel Spark’s literary fortunes changed dramatically in 1951: she won The Observer short-story competition with ‘The Seraph and the Zambesi’; Macmillan commissioned a novel, and fiction became her pursuit. Her first title, The Comforters, appeared in 1957 to acclaim, notably from Evelyn Waugh. Muriel Spark wrote some of her later mordant and inimitable novels in a Camberwell bedsit, protected by a loyal landlady, Tiny Lazzari. Muriel Spark’s ‘special narrative voice’ has been called ‘one of the great creations of postwar writing’ (Guardian 2006). She once said she loved her characters ‘like a cat loves a bird’ (Mount 2009). The Mandelbaum Gate (1965), written after observing the Eichmann trial, won the James *Tait Black Prize, and she received many other nominations and honours in the UK and beyond (DBE, 1993). Her own favourite was the bleak novel The Driver’s Seat (1970). With international success in the 1960s, Muriel Spark moved to New York and later Rome. Here she met sculptor Penelope Jardine, originally one of her secretaries, but the women became friends ‘from our first glass of whisky’ (letter to ED, 25 Jan. 2017). Jardine’s friendship would be the mainstay of her later years. Muriel Spark admitted she had been a bad picker of men but had been supported by 404

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women throughout her life: schoolfriend Frances Niven; Christina Kay; Tiny Lazzari; and Penelope Jardine. In the 1970s she moved to Penelope Jardine’s rural residence in Tuscany. Despite problems caused by complications after surgery in later years, she found there the privacy and tranquillity to complete her life’s work. She took delight in her success, and as she said in her autobiography, quoting Benvenuto Cellini, ‘I went on my way rejoicing’ (Curriculum Vitae 1992). ED • NLS: Muriel Spark personal archives; Robin Spark Papers. Spark, M., Works as above, and (2014) The Golden Fleece: essays by Muriel Spark, P. Jardine (ed.). Bold, A. (ed.) (1984) Muriel Spark: an odd capacity for vision; Mount, F. (2009) ‘The Go-away bird’, The Spectator, 12 Aug.; The Guardian, 17 April 2006 (obit.); eODNB (Bibl.); Rees, D. (1992) Muriel Spark, William Trevor, Ian McEwan: a bibliography of their first editions; The Scotsman, 17 April 2006 (obit.); Stanford, D. (1963) Muriel Spark: a critical and biographical study; Stannard, M. (2009) Muriel Spark: the biography (Bibl.); Website of the Muriel Spark Society: http:// themurielsparksociety.blogspot.co.uk (includes a full list of her Works). Personal information (Penelope Jardine).

m. Laracy, born Glasgow 24 Sept. 1921, died Brantford, Ontario, Canada, 24 Jan. 1995. ‘Lumberjill’ during Second World War. Daughter of Rosina Crombie, and Archibald Speirs, pharmaceutical salesman. The eldest of three children, Vera Spiers was an excellent student at local schools in the Charing Cross district, though motherless from the age of seven. After school, she worked as a secretary for a Glasgow steel company. In November 1942, like many young Scotswomen, Vera Speirs joined the Women’s Timber Corps, a recently formed branch of the Women’s Land Army. After a month training in Brechin, Angus, learning the rudiments of the lumber business, she was posted to Advie, Morayshire, as a feller and crosscutter. Here the WTC Lumberjills lived in cold, damp wooden huts in a remote, densely forested area of the Highlands. Full uniforms were issued upon arrival. Camp life was rugged, the work (8 am to 5 pm weekdays with a half-day on Saturday) was arduous and dangerous: felling, crosscutting with 6 ft saws, loading and hauling timber by horse or to the railway siding by tractor and bogey. The women were supervised by male gaffers, who assisted with extra heavy lifting. Vera Spiers became a ‘horsewoman’, dragging trees through the forest to the crosscutters (and suffered a hand injury there). When Advie camp SPEIRS, Vera Muriel,

closed, WTC members transferred to Dunvegan House, Grantown on Spey. On 27 June 1945, in Glasgow, Vera Spiers married Canadian Thomas Laracy, whom she had met at Advie: he was from the Newfoundland Forestry Unit, a civilian group who came to help the war effort in Britain. They left for Newfoundland in July 1946 and moved to Brantford, Ontario, eventually having four children. The Lumberjills, although a uniformed body subject to the same rules as all service personnel, were not recognised at war’s end as veterans, a bitter disappointment to the members. However, in 2007, a memorial statue of a WTC Lumberjill was inaugurated at the Lodge Visitor Centre, Aberfoyle, on the initiative of Forestry Commission Scotland. re • (1945) ‘Meet the Members’ (ISBN 1 670423 3 48) at www. members.shaw.ca/relder1; scotland.forestry.gov.uk/activities/ heritage/world-war-two/womens-timber-corps Personal knowledge: RE, T/855 Lumberjill WTC. SPENCE, Catherine Helen, born Melrose 31 Oct. 1825, died Adelaide, South Australia, 3 April 1910. Writer, journalist and social reformer. Daughter of Helen Brodie, and David Spence, banker, lawyer and clerk. The fifth of eight children, Catherine Spence began her education in Melrose and expected to go to high school in Edinburgh, but her father’s ruinous investments saw the family emigrating to South Australia in 1839. There she worked as a governess, 1843–6, and ran her own school, 1846–c. 1850. Her first novel, Clara Morison (1854), tells the story of a young Scottish orphan making her way in South Australia. This was followed by Tender and True (1856), Mr. Hogarth’s Will (1865), The Author’s Daughter (1868), An Agnostic’s Progress (1884) and serials in the local press. Leaving Presbyterianism in 1856 to become a Unitarian, she felt ‘the cloud was lifted from the universe’ (Spence 1910, p. 28). From 1878, she preached in the Adelaide Unitarian church. She wrote prolifically in the press, initially under her brother’s name, but from 1878 was an important member of outside staff of the Register newspaper, contributing over 1,500 articles, including leader articles and reviews over a broad array of areas to the press. Her fiction and her journalistic work were now infused with scientific meliorism and social science. Visiting Britain, including Melrose, in 1865–6, she enjoyed participating in circles of writers and social reformers. A key figure in the Boarding Out Society (1872), which supervised the care of state children in private homes, she was appointed to the State

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Children’s Council in 1887 and the Destitute Board in 1897. She supported free public education, was the first woman appointed to a local School Board (1877), and campaigned for the Advanced School for Girls, opened in 1879. The Laws We Live Under (1880) was the first Australian social studies textbook. During the 1890s, she campaigned for electoral reform along proportional representation lines, speaking publicly in Australia, and during 1893–4 in the US and Britain. She joined the WSL only in 1891, becoming a vice-president. The first Australian woman to run for election, she was a candidate for the Federal Convention (1897). She lived with her mother until the latter’s death in 1887. Catherine Spence pioneered many areas, as a writer, journalist, political commentator, social reformer and political candidate. Widely known on her death as ‘The Grand Old Woman’ of Australia, her memory was largely lost until feminist historians reclaimed her as a foremother: in 2001 she figured on the Australian $5 note produced to commemorate the Centenary of Federation. More recent critiques have pointed to other sides of her career: as a middle-class reformer seeking to control the poor, and as a white woman deeply implicated in colonialism. ma • State Library of South Australia: Private Record Group 88: records of C. H. Spence; National Library of Australia, Canberra: Spence papers MSS 41; Mitchell Library, Sydney NSW: Spence corr. and papers, 1856–1909 ML MSS 202; Spence diary 1894, in private hands. Spence, C. H., Works as above and (1878) ‘Some Social Aspects of South Australian Life, by a Colonist of 1839’; [1879 unpub.] (1984) Handfasted, (1884) An Agnostic’s Progress from the Known to the Unknown, (1910) Autobiography, (1994) Tenacious of the Past: the recollections of Helen Brodie, J. King, J. and G. Tulloch, eds. Bibl. at www.slsa.sa.gov.au/spence/ ADB; Magarey, S. (1985) Unbridling the Tongues of Women; (2005) Ever Yours, C. H. Spence: Catherine Helen Spence’s An Autobiography (1825–1910), Diary (1894) and Some Correspondence (1894–1910); ODNB (2004); Swain, S. ‘Catherine Helen Spence’, The Encyclopedia of Women and Leadership in Twentieth Century Australia, at www.womenaustralia.info/leaders/biogs/WLE0129b.htm SPENCE, Catherine Stafford, born Lerwick 16 July 1823, died Lerwick 21 Sept. 1906. Teacher and translator. Daughter of Jane Fea, and Dr William Spence, army staff surgeon. Fifth of twelve children, Catherine Spence was educated by Moravians in the Lerwick Subscription School, and became a lifelong teacher. Unmarried,

she taught in private schools, some her own: she was a governess for several years to a Shetland clergyman, and headmistress briefly at a reformatory in Perth. In 1875, she was female principal of the Church of Scotland College at Madras, India, and in the 1880s taught at a Board School in New Zealand. In her late 60s, she returned to Shetland, and became headmistress at schools in West Yell and Gulberwick. Her log book for Gulberwick survives: each entry, unusually, is an account of her teaching methods, and her efforts to teach Scandinavian history to pupils. Catherine Spence was a gifted translator, from Danish, Dutch, Italian and other languages. She tackled theology and novels and, in old age, Jakob Jakobsen’s great dictionary of the Norn language in Shetland. Her book Earl Rognvald and his Forebears (1896) is an attractive introduction to Shetland’s Viking history. A local newspaper celebrated Catherine Spence’s ability ‘to fight the world almost unaided and alone . . .’[B]y sheer force of character, which strenuous work, a hard fight, and high ideals inevitably produce, [she] has left a name and memorial’ (Shetland News, 1906). bs • Shetland Archives: CO5/5/34: Log book, Gulberwick school, 1893–1907; D3/2-4 (MS translations). Spence, C., Works as above, and (trans.) (1894) Ployen’s Reminiscences. Shetland News, 29 Sept. 1906 (obit.); Shetland Times, 29 Sept. 1906 (obits). SPOTTISWOODE, Alicia Anne (Lady John Scott),

m. Scott, born Spottiswoode, Berwickshire, 24 June 1810, died Spottiswoode, 12 March 1900. Composer and collector of songs. Daughter of Helen Wauchope of Niddrie-Marischal, and John Spottiswoode of Spottiswoode, lawyer. Alicia Anne Spottiswoode was the eldest of five children. She was well educated, at her father’s insistence, and displayed a talent for both music and poetry. On 16 March 1836, she married Lord John Montagu Douglas Scott (1809–60), brother of the Duke of Buccleuch. Although the Spottiswoodes were already well connected, the marriage propelled her further into Scotland’s high society. She was widowed in 1860. A philanthropist, she bequeathed £2,000 to local trustees for the benefit of ‘the moral and respectable poor on the estate of Spottiswoode’ (Hall and Barry 1997, p. 78). A collector of songs and poems, she composed several works including ‘Durisdeer’ and the proJacobite poem, ‘Shame on ye Gallants’– an ode to Prince Charlie – and, some scholars argue, ‘Loch 406

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Lomond’. She is best remembered for ‘Annie Laurie’, originally penned in the 1690s by William Douglas of Fingland. Douglas had tried, unsuccessfully, to woo young Anna Laurie of Maxwelton by writing two stanzas in her honour. More than 140 years later, Alicia Spottiswoode, aged 25, came across the poem in a book of Scottish ballads. She reworked Douglas’s original, added a third stanza, and set the words to the melody of her own ballad, ‘Kempie Kaye’. Published anonymously in 1838, without the author’s permission, ‘Annie Laurie’ grew in popularity throughout the 19th century, was the most popular song sung during the First World War, and is perhaps Scotland’s best-known love song. jjw • Cunningham, A. (1825) The Songs of Scotland, Ancient and Modern; Warrender, M. (ed.) (1911) Songs and Verses by Lady John Scott ; Hall, D. and Barry, T. (1997) Spottiswoode: life and labour on a Berwickshire estate, 1753–1793; ODNB (2004) (see Scott, Alicia Anne); Palmer, R. (1990) What a Lovely War! British Soldiers’ Songs from the Boer War to the Present Day. STEEL, Flora Annie, n. Webster, born

Harrow-onthe-Hill 2 April 1847, died Minchinhampton 12 April 1929. Novelist and campaigner for women’s rights in India and Britain. Daughter of Isabella Macallum, and George Webster, Sheriff-Clerk of Forfarshire. Sixth of 11 children, Flora Webster moved to Burnside, Forfar, when she was nine. Mostly home-schooled, she believed her mother had provided a wider education than any contemporary girls’ institution. From an established AngloIndian family, she treasured her Scottish roots. On marrying Henry William Steel (1840–1923) in December 1867, she travelled to India. Unable to have more children after the difficult birth of her daughter, Mabel, in 1870, and disdainful of traditional roles assigned to memsahibs, she eagerly campaigned for women’s rights to education, employment and health care, wrote for newspapers and, whenever Henry Steel fell ill, performed his duties. Despite fraught relations with local government, she served as first female inspector of schools and on the Punjab Educational Board from 1885 to 1888. Her profound belief in the imperial mission underpinned unrelenting criticism of anything failing to meet her exacting standards, whether corruption or penny-pinching officialdom, but especially the failure by most Britons to learn local languages and the policy of regularly moving officials, enhancing superficial contacts between the

races. She criticised even the Vicereine Dufferin’s campaign to bring female doctors to India, as consolidating purdah’s power over Indian women. In India, she translated anthologies of Punjabi folktales, lavishly illustrated by Lockwood Kipling. With Grace Gardiner, she co-authored The Complete Indian Cook and Housekeeper, advising on everything from correct memsahib–servant etiquette to emergency home-made cement. Returning to Scotland in 1889, she began writing fiction, becoming known as the female Kipling. Almost alone among her contemporaries, she tried to analyse all sides of the Anglo-Indian relationship. Her finest book, On the Face of the Waters (1896), provides one of the most balanced accounts of the 1857 Rebellion by an Anglo-Indian. A suffragist, she campaigned in both countries. Heinemann purchased a manuscript copy of On the Face, which was sold by bailiffs in 1913 after Flora Steel had refused to pay rent as a protest. Her last years were spent writing her very candid autobiography, The Garden of Fidelity (1930). A complex woman, she exemplified the conflicting motivations of Victorian feminists. Unfairly dismissed as the Raj’s Mrs Beeton, Flora Steel’s more deserved legacy is her fiction and the campaigning zeal she retained throughout her life. PB • Steel, F. A., Works as above and see SWHA (Bibl.). Brantlinger, P. (1988) Rule of Darkness: British literature and imperialism 1830–1914; Glasgow Herald, ‘Portrait of a gifted Scotswoman’, 21 Nov. 1929; HSWW (Bibl.); ODNB (2004). STEIN, Grace

see WALLACE, Grace Jane (1804–78)

STEPHEN, Jessie, MBE, born Marylebone, London,

19 April 1893, died Bristol 12 June 1979. Domestic servant, suffragette and trade unionist. Daughter of Jane Miller, and Alexander Stephen, tailor. Jessie Stephen was the eldest of 11 children. The family stayed in Edinburgh for six years, then moved to Glasgow in 1901. She was educated at North Kelvinside School and, after gaining a scholarship, at 15 she became a pupil teacher. Her father’s unemployment forced her to work as an errand girl, then in a factory, before going into domestic service because the ‘board and lodging helped the money wage’ (Spare Rib, 32, p. 11). Her father was an ILP member and all the children attended the Socialist Sunday School. Aged 12, Jessie Stephen was selling Labour Woman outside the St Andrew’s Hall in Glasgow; she became vicechair of her local ILP branch, Maryhill, at 16, ‘the youngest age you were allowed to join as a full 407

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member’ (ibid.). She joined the WSPU, attending branch meetings and demonstrations and participating in acid attacks on post boxes, unsuspected in her servant’s clothes. ‘Dressed in my maid’s uniform I . . . dropped in my little package, walked away again and reached home without interruption’ (Stephen [n.d.], p. 49). As part of a delegation of 12 women from Glasgow WSPU, she lobbied the House of Commons and was received by David Lloyd George. Jessie Stephen saw the vote ‘as only the means to an end’ (ibid., p. 12), and was a lifelong campaigner for women’s rights, the Labour Party, the Co-operative Society and the trade union movement. She experienced first-hand how employers treated maidservants as slaves, and organised her fellow workers into the new Scottish Domestic Workers’ Federation, affiliated to Glasgow Trades Council before being integrated into the Domestic Workers’ Union of Great Britain (DWU). Because of her political activities, employment opportunities dried up, so she moved to London where the DWU assisted her. She returned to Glasgow during the First World War, but Sylvia Pankhurst recruited her to establish new branches of the Workers’ Suffrage Federation (WSF) in England. She worked with the WSF until 1917, then became women’s organiser of the Bermondsey ILP and was elected to Bermondsey Borough Council in 1922. She also worked with *Mary Macarthur and the NFWW, becoming secretary of the domestic workers’ section in December 1918. Leading an independent lifestyle, Jessie Stephen became a journalist with a regular women’s column in the Glasgow Herald. She lectured in Canada and the USA in the 1920s, was active in the Workers’ Birth Control movement, ran her own secretarial agency and joined the National Union of Clerks in 1938. In 1952, she became a councillor in Bristol and was the first woman President of the Bristol Trades Council, an office she retained into her late seventies. She was awarded the TUC Gold Badge in 1955 and was made MBE in 1977 for her work in the trade union movement. kbb

justice campaigner. Daughter of Helen Murray, and Campbell Steven, climber and writer. Helen Steven was educated at Laurel Bank School and the University of Glasgow, then taught history for seven years at Laurel Bank. Having begun climbing with her father as a teenager, in 1970 she led the first women’s expedition to Greenland, and always loved outdoor life. In 1972 she went to Vietnam with a Quaker project working in orphanages, a life-changing experience. Joining the Society of Friends, she met fellow Quaker Ellen Moxley, who became her lifelong partner, and they adopted a Vietnamese orphan, Marian. In 1979, Helen Steven became full-time peace and justice worker at the Iona Community founded by George MacLeod, who greatly admired her. During the 1980s, she developed training for non-violent direct action and gave inspirational courses on peace, conflict resolution and non-violence attended by many people, including the military, in both Iona and at Peace House, Braco (Perthshire). She later helped set up the Scottish Centre for Nonviolence in Dunblane (now closed). Overcoming, as she said herself, her lawabiding middle-class upbringing, Helen Steven persistently demonstrated at Greenham Common and at the Faslane Naval Base, being arrested and ­sentenced to five days in Cornton Vale prison in 1987. (Her partner Ellen Moxley was one of the ‘Trident Three’, who were acquitted in 1999, after months on remand.) In 2004, the two women were jointly awarded the Gandhi International Peace Prize and delivered the Gandhi Annual Lecture. Having retired to Raffin, near Lochinver, they became involved in the Assynt Peace Group and were part of the community, with their love of music, art and gardening. SR

• NLS: Jessie Stephen, ‘Submission is for Slaves’, unpublished autobiography (n.d.). ODNB (2004); Smyth, J. J. (2000) Labour in Glasgow ­1896–1936: socialism, suffrage, sectarianism; Spare Rib, 32 (1975), pp. 10–13; WSM. Additional information: Audrey Canning.

STEVENSON, Flora Clift,

born Glasgow 19 Oct. 1942, died Raffin, Stoer, Lochinver 12 April 2016. Peace and STEVEN, Helen,‡

• Steven, H. (2005) No Extraordinary Power: prayer, stillness and activism (the Swarthmore lecture). Galloway, K. (June 2016) ‘A radical peace activist’, www.dangerouswomenproject.org; www.gandhifoundation.org; The Herald, 23 April 2016, The Scotsman, 22 April 2016 (obits).

born Glasgow 30 Oct. 1839, died St Andrews 28 Sept. 1905; STEVENSON, Louisa, born Glasgow 15 July 1835, died Edinburgh 13 May 1908. Feminists, educationalists and philanthropists. Daughters of Jane Stewart Shannan, and James Stevenson, businessman. Flora Stevenson was the youngest of six daughters; four, herself included, stayed single. Early years were spent in South Shields, where their

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father was a senior partner in the Jarrow Chemical Company. On his retirement, the family settled in 13 Randolph Crescent, Edinburgh, where she spent the rest of her life. She was educated in a private school, but was committed to improving the education of working-class children as well as middle-class girls. Flora Stevenson and Phoebe Blyth were the first women elected to a school board (1873) after the 1872 Education (Scotland) Act. She won a further nine elections and in 1900 was the first woman to chair the Edinburgh School Board. She represented the Board on the Burgh Committee on Secondary Education (1892–9) and the Edinburgh Educational and the George Heriot Trusts (1899) and became an Honorary Fellow of the EIS (1892). She insisted that girls should compete on the same terms as boys, questioned the time devoted to domestic subjects in the girls’ curriculum, and suggested that boys would benefit from such subjects. Her resistance to the introduction of cookery into Edinburgh’s Board Schools was successfully opposed by *Christian Guthrie Wright and by her sister, Louisa Stevenson, Honorary Secretary and Treasurer respectively of the Edinburgh School of Cookery (1875–91). Louisa Stevenson chaired its successor, the Edinburgh School of Cookery and Domestic Economy (1892–1905). Flora and Louisa Stevenson were early members of the Ladies’ Debating Society (established by *Sarah Siddons Mair in 1865 as the Edinburgh Essay Society), and founder members of the ELEA (1867), which campaigned for women’s entry to university. They supported *Sophia Jex-Blake in founding a women’s medical school. With their elder sister Elisa Stevenson (1829–1904), they were members of ENSWS (1867). Flora Stevenson addressed the first public meeting of the GWSAWS (1902). The Stevensons held to the Free Church of Scotland principles of self-help and private charity, and believed that women should play a role in public bodies. One of the first two women elected to the Edinburgh Parochial Board, Louisa Stevenson was re-elected six times to the Board of Managers of Edinburgh Royal Infirmary. Flora Stevenson held a number of posts in the 1890s: Director of the Edinburgh Philosophical Institution and the Royal Blind Asylum and School, and Vice-president of the WFTU, the NUWW and the WLUA. The University of Edinburgh made her an Honorary LLD in 1903, and her sister Louisa Stevenson in 1906, for their services to female higher education. The Edinburgh

School Board named a school in Flora Stevenson’s honour at Comely Bank; it opened in 1902 and still flourishes as a primary school. In 1905, just before her death, she was presented with the Freedom of the City of Edinburgh. jm c d • AGC; Begg, T. (1994) The Excellent Women: the origins and history of Queen Margaret College ; Corr, H. (1998) ‘Reclaiming Scottish women’s lives in education: the life of Flora Stevenson’, Gender and Scottish Society. Politics, Policies and Participation (Conference, 31 Oct. 1997); Glasgow Herald, 13 April 1906 (obit. FS); 14 May 1908 (obit. LS); ODNB (2004) (Stevenson, Flora; Stevenson, Louisa); The Scotsman, 28, 30 Sept. 1876; WWW (1966) vol. 1 (1897–1915). STEVENSON, Louisa

(1839–1905)

see STEVENSON, Flora

STEWART, Eliza, (later Isla), born Dryfesdale, Dumfriesshire, 21 August 1855, died Shalford, Surrey, 6 March 1910. Matron, nurse leader, educationist and activist. Daughter of Janet (Jessie) Murray, and John Hope Johnstone Stewart, farmer and journalist. Isla Stewart was educated at home, then trained in 1879 as a special probationer at the Nightingale School of Nursing, London. Following posts as matron in a smallpox and a fever hospital for the Metropolitan Asylum’s Board, she was appointed matron of St Bartholomew’s Hospital, London (1887–1910). Her predecessor there was Scottishborn Ethel Manson (1857–1947), who had moved to England as a child, and was matron of Barts for six years before marrying Dr Bedford Fenwick in 1887. The two women remained close friends and allies thereafter; both were instrumental in achieving reforms in nursing, campaigning for state registration and founding the ICN in 1899. Ethel Fenwick founded the first professional nursing journal, The Nursing Record, later The British Journal of Nursing. In nurse education, Isla Stewart advocated discipline, supervised practical nursing experience and the importance of moral values. She published a textbook, Practical Nursing, in 1899. As matron, she consolidated Ethel Fenwick’s reforms and improved working conditions for nurses. In the fight for registration, opposed by Florence Nightingale and not achieved until 1919, Isla Stewart’s cool diplomacy restrained her friend Ethel Fenwick’s impetuosity. Isla Stewart contributed significantly to the development of professional awareness among nurses. Her grave is in Moffat. bem

• ODNB (2004) (Fenwick, Ethel; Stewart, Eliza); McGann, S. Y. (1992) ‘Isla Stewart. The incarnation of common sense’,

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STEWART in The Battle of the Nurses; Nursing Record/Brit. Jour. Nursing, 1888–1947, www.rcn.org.uk/ ­historicalnursingjournals STEWART, Elizabeth, Lady Lovat, Countess of Lennox and March, Countess of Arran, c. 1554–c.

1595. Courtier and political leader. Daughter of Elizabeth Gordon, and John, 4th Earl of Atholl. Elizabeth Stewart played a unique role, participating equally with her third husband in governing the realm in the last years of James VI’s minority. She had six children with her first husband, Hugh Fraser, 5th Lord of Lovat (d. 1577). On 6 December 1578, she married Robert Stewart (1522/3–86), Earl of Lennox (and Earl of March from 1580). However, she became pregnant with the child of James Stewart (c. 1545–96), son of Lord Ochiltree, and had her marriage publicly annulled on the grounds of her elderly husband’s impotency (despite rumours that he had an illegitimate child). On 6 July 1581, she married James, who had become Earl of Arran a few months earlier, possibly due to her influence. They had at least three other children. From mid-1583 until July 1585, the couple enjoyed a political ascendancy at court. Contemporaries recognised them as equal partners. Arran became Chancellor in 1584; by February 1585 it was rumoured that the Countess had been made ‘Lady Comptroller’, presiding over justice courts, although there is no official record of this. Although the absence of a queen consort or dowager helps explain Elizabeth Stewart’s prominent role, it earned her much dislike, especially when her enemies died and she plundered the deposed *Mary Queen of Scots’ possessions. Rumours circulated that she consulted with witches and even used sorcery herself. Arran’s downfall came in late 1585 and he lost his earldom. Retiring to Elizabeth’s jointure lands from her marriage to Lord Lovat, the couple plotted unsuccessfully to return to power. Elizabeth Stewart died c. 1595; her husband was murdered shortly afterwards. rg/ee • Grant, R. (1999) ‘Politicking Jacobean women: Lady Ferniehurst, the Countess of Arran and the Countess of Huntly, c. 1580–1603’, in E. Ewan and M. Meikle (eds) Women in Scotland c. 1100–c. 1750; ODNB (2004). STEWART, Elizabeth, Queen of Bohemia, Electress Palatine, born probably Dunfermline 19 August

1596, died London 13 Feb. 1662. Daughter of *Anna of Denmark, Queen of Scots, and James VI. Born two years after her brother, Prince Henry Frederick, Elizabeth was named after her godmother, Elizabeth I of England. She was sent to live

with Lord and Lady Livingstone, her guardians, at Linlithgow Palace, where she stayed until her father inherited the English throne in 1603. When she moved south, her new guardians were Lord and Lady Harington at Combe Abbey, Wiltshire. There she had her own household and was taught reading, writing, French, Italian, dancing and music. In 1605, Guy Fawkes plotted to blow up her father and brothers in parliament and place her on the throne instead, but the assassination attempt was discovered and the conspirators executed. When she was 12, Elizabeth was given apartments in the palaces of Whitehall and Hampton Court, and visited London more frequently. Since her birth there had been talk of her marriage, and a long list of suitors expressed an interest in her. Anxious to preserve the balance of power in Europe, James decided to marry her to Frederick, the young Protestant Elector Palatine (1596–1632). The marriage articles were signed in spring 1612 and in October Frederick arrived in London. He and Elizabeth fell deeply in love. Although the marriage arrangements had to be postponed when her adored elder brother died in November 1612, the young couple were betrothed on 27 December and married on St Valentine’s Day, 1613. In April, they left for Frederick’s castle of Heidelberg. The first of Elizabeth’s 13 children, Frederick Henry, was born there the following January. In 1618, however, the longstanding religious crisis reached a climax and the Protestants of Bohemia wrote to ask Frederick to become their king; theirs was an elective monarchy, and until then they had been ruled by Roman Catholics. Frederick was anxious to help the Bohemians, but he knew the dangers of accepting their throne. The Catholic Holy Roman Emperor would never tolerate a Protestant monarch in his realms. In the end Frederick agreed, some said to please Elizabeth, and they set out for Prague, where they were crowned in November 1619. Their enemies referred to them as ‘the Winter King and Queen’, saying that when spring came they would melt away with the snow. Frederick’s reign lasted slightly longer, but on 8 November 1620 his army was defeated by imperial forces at the Battle of the White Mountain and he and Elizabeth were forced to flee. Her cheerful courage in the face of danger earned her the admiration of all their supporters. They eventually found refuge with Frederick’s uncle, the Prince of Orange, at The Hague. Despite many attempts, Frederick never succeeded in regaining his possessions.

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He died in 1632. Although her eldest son was restored to the Palatinate in 1648, Elizabeth lived in increasingly penurious circumstances and in 1661, after the Restoration, she finally returned to London, where she died less than a year later. Roman Catholics compared her to Helen of Troy, blaming her for starting the Thirty Years’ War, but for Protestants she was their iconic ‘Queen of Hearts’ and when her grandson eventually succeeded to the British throne in 1714 as George I, she was remembered as the vital dynastic link between the house of Hanover and the royal Stewarts. rkm

that she ‘addresses me by the endearing name of son’ (Beattie 1850, II, p. 287). Another visitor was Count Purgstall, who married her sister, Jane Anne Cranstoun (c. 1760–1835), believed to have suggested the character of Diana Vernon in Rob Roy. As Countess Purgstall, Jane lived mainly in Austria (cf. Grierson 1932, pp. 504–8). The Stewarts were famous for entertaining a mix of aristocrats, lawyers, intellectuals, students and visitors to Edinburgh, especially while living in Lothian House and Whitefoord House in the Canongate. Many attested that the success of these evenings owed much to Helen D’Arcy Stewart’s warmth and unpretentiousness. She was also a lively letterwriter. Helen Stewart survived her husband by ten years: theirs is the only sealed tomb in Canongate Kirkyard. dgm

• Akkerman, N. N. W. (2011–15) The Correspondence of Elizabeth Stuart, Queen of Bohemia, 2 vols; Baker, L. M. (ed.) (1953) The Letters of Elizabeth, Queen of Bohemia; Marshall, R. K. (1998) The Winter Queen (Bibl.); ODNB (2004) (Elizabeth, Princess [Elizabeth Stuart]).

n. Cranstoun, born 13 March 1765, died Edinburgh 28 July 1838. Hostess and poet. Daughter of Maria Brisbane, and the Hon. George Cranstoun. Helen Cranstoun is known to have written several poems, among them ‘The tears I shed must ever fall’, which was included, with four lines added by Robert Burns, in The Scots Musical Museum (Johnson 1792). Her future husband’s admiration for this lyric was said to have been the cause of their meeting. On 26 July 1790, Helen Cranstoun married, as his second wife, Dugald Stewart (1753–1828), Professor of Moral Philosophy at Edinburgh University. It was an outstandingly happy and successful marriage. Stewart ‘never considered a piece of his composition to be finished until she had reviewed it’ (Stewart 1828, Appendix, p. 2). They had a son and daughter, and between 1796 and 1806 the Stewarts accommodated as boarders a succession of young men of rank who came to study at the University of Edinburgh. Helen D’Arcy Stewart became a virtual foster-mother to several of them, including John William Ward, 1st Earl of Dudley and Foreign Secretary under Canning and Wellington, whose letters to ‘Ivy’ (Romilly 1905) were addressed to Helen Stewart; Hon. Henry Temple, Viscount Palmerston, later Foreign Secretary and Prime Minister; and his brother William. Other young men who frequented the Stewarts’ home at various periods included Rev. Sydney Smith; Lovell and Henry Edgeworth, brothers of the writer Maria, who greatly admired Helen D’Arcy Stewart; Walter Scott; and the poet Thomas Campbell, who noted STEWART, Helen D’Arcy,

• Beattie, W. (1850) Life and Letters of Thomas Campbell; Grierson, H. J. C (ed.) (1932–7) The Letters of Sir Walter Scott, VI, pp. 504–8; Johnson, J. (1787–1803) The Scots Musical Museum; Macintyre, G. (2003) Dugald Stewart: the pride and ornament of Scotland (Bibl.); ODNB (2004); Romilly, S. H. (ed.) (1905) Letters to ‘Ivy’ from the First Earl of Dudley; Stewart, M. (1828) Memoir of the late Dugald Stewart, Esq. STEWART, Henrietta, Countess and Marchioness of Huntly, born France 1573, died France 2 Sept. 1642.

Courtier and defender of Catholicism. Daughter of Katherine de Balsac, and Esmé Stewart, Duke of Lennox, favoured courtier of James VI. Raised in France, Henrietta Stewart was James VI’s close female relative – she was the daughter of James’s cousin and a descendant of James II. She was engaged to marry George Gordon, 6th Earl of Huntly (1561/2–1636), in 1581. The Privy Council granted 5,000 merks to bring her from France for a magnificent wedding at Holyrood on 21 July 1588. Loved by James as a daughter, she became a confidante of *Anna of Denmark. Henrietta Stewart’s strong connection to the Jesuits influenced the young Queen. She gave Anna a Catholic catechism and influenced her in her decision to convert to Catholicism in the early 1590s. The Countess’s connections with James ensured that, despite her religion and her husband’s intrigues, she was never far from royal favour; she was present at the birth or baptism of three royal children. At Princess Margaret’s baptism the Earl and Countess were made Marquis and Marchioness of Huntly. They had at least five sons and four daughters. The Marchioness actively looked after the family’s estates, and energetically interceded for her husband’s interests during his banishments.

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After 1603, the absentee monarchs did not protect the Marquis from the Kirk, which had long detested his Catholicism. He was excommunicated, reconciled, and then lapsed again. Henrietta Stewart, however, never recanted; she lived quietly in Aberdeenshire, protected by her royal connection. Widowed in 1636 and persecuted by the Covenanting kirk, she fled to France in 1641. rg/ vmmm • Grant, R. (1999) ‘Politicking Jacobean women: Lady Ferniehurst, the Countess of Arran and the Countess of Huntly’, in E. Ewan and M. Meikle (eds) Women in Scotland c. 1100–c. 1750 (Bibl.); SP, iv, pp. 541–5, v, p. 356; Meikle, M. and Payne, H. M. (2013) ‘From Lutheranism to Catholicism: the faith of Anna of Denmark (1574–1619)’, The Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 64/1, pp. 45–69.

n. MacGregor, BEM, born near Caputh, 17 July 1906, died Blairgowrie 4 Sept. 1997. Traditional singer and songwriter. Daughter of Martha Stewart, and Donald (Dan) MacGregor, travelling people. Belle MacGregor was born in a tent on the banks of the Tay, the daughter of a travelling family. She grew up in Blairgowrie in a ‘singleend’, taken by her mother when her father died, and went to school there. She learned her father’s songs through her brothers, Donald and Andy. As a teenager she went with her brothers to Ireland, pearl-fishing, then married her second cousin, piper Alec Stewart, in Ballymoney in 1925. They had two sons and three daughters. Belle found the life of a traveller in Ireland difficult, and she and Alec finally settled in Blairgowrie. In Ireland, however, she had learned many songs, which she sang all her life. At weddings and special occasions the Stewarts had a tradition of making up family songs, which was how Belle began writing her own songs, which include ‘The Berryfields of Blair’ and ‘Whistling at the Ploo’. Blairgowrie journalist Maurice Fleming ‘discovered’ the Stewart family, living in a cottage in Rattray, in the early 1950s. That led to years of visits by scholars and collectors, including Hamish Henderson and Ewan MacColl. After the first Blairgowrie Festival in 1966, the Traditional Music and Song Association of Scotland was founded. Belle Stewart became world-famous as a traditional singer, more than one authority regarding her as one of the finest folk artists in these islands. She sang ballads, broadsides and music-hall songs, including ‘The Twa Brithers’, ‘The Bonnie Hoose o’Airlie’, ‘The Queen amang the Heather’ and

STEWART, Isabella (Belle),

‘Betsy Bell’. When Ewan MacColl involved Belle’s family in the Radio Ballad ‘The Travelling People’, their reputation grew, and they were invited abroad, to Europe and the USA. Belle Stewart had become a matriarch of song, charming audiences everywhere. She received the British Empire Medal (BEM) for services to folk music in 1985. On her 90th birthday, Blairgowrie gave her the most prestigious venue in the town for the party. Belle and Alec’s daughter, Sheila Stewart m. MacGregor MBE (1935–2014), became in turn a leading exponent of Scots travellers’ traditional ballads and storytelling, nationally and internationally, recorded by UK company Topic (2000). (‘We don’t perform,’ she insisted, ‘we produce a natural function’.) Hamish Henderson wrote: ‘Sheila . . . has more of the conyach [soul] than any singer [except] the late *Jeannie Robertson’ (quoted The Independent, 2014). SMD oug /SR • Stewart, S. (2006) Queen Amang the Heather – The Life of Belle Stewart; (2011) A Traveller’s Life. Douglas, S. (ed.) (1992) The Sang’s the Thing: voices from Lowland Scotland; MacColl, E. and Seeger, P. (1986) Till Doomsday in the Afternoon: The Folklore of a Family of Scots Travellers, the Stewarts of Blairgowrie; The Independent, 12 Dec. 2014 (obit. Sheila Stewart). Personal knowledge.

born Aberdeen 4 Feb. 1901, died 3 Dec. 1982. Singer. Daughter of Betty Townsley, dealer and businesswoman, and James Stewart, ex-army, piper and fiddler. Lucy Stewart was one of a musical family of 14 in Aberdeen who later lived on a croft in Fetterangus. Her brother James played drums in Aberdeen’s Tivoli Theatre. Her youngest sister, Jean (born 1911), was a pianist, fell in love with the accordion, had her own dance band and became well known as a broadcaster. Lucy, the stay-at-home daughter who never married, virtually brought up her two nieces, one of whom, the singer Elizabeth Stewart, learned Lucy’s ballads and songs by osmosis. In the family, Lucy, who is now considered one of the great source singers of the Folk Revival, was not classed as a musician at all. She was the one in the background cooking and cleaning for the rest of the family, which she was happy to do. She was a handsome woman with a wonderful voice and a great family heritage of song. Elizabeth Stewart describes her as both shy and easy-going. She sang about the house, to help with the work and to keep up her spirits.

STEWART, Lucy,

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All the travelling Elizabeth Stewart and her sister did was on a horse and cart with their aunt. Even when Jean settled in Fetterangus, she still had a dance band and taught in schools and farmhouses and from her home(s), so Lucy Stewart continued to fulfil the role of mother-figure and general factotum. In the 1960s, Kenneth Goldstein, a Fulbright scholar (later President of the American Folklore Society), was introduced to the Stewarts of Fetterangus. He recognised and recorded Lucy’s singing, which later appeared on disc. Her repertoire included ‘The Laird o’Drum’, ‘The Battle of Harlaw’, ‘I Aince Loed a Lass’, ‘The Lass o’Bennachie’, ‘The Lass o’Glenshee’, ‘Mill o’Tifty’s Annie’ and ‘Plooman Laddies’. Lucy Stewart never sang in public so did not become as well known as some of her relations, but she now has an international reputation. SMD oug • Douglas, S. (1992) The Sang’s the Thing: voices from Lowland Scotland; Stewart, E. (2012) Up Yon Wide and Lonely Glen: travellers’ songs, stories and tunes of the Fetterangus Stewarts. Private information: Elizabeth Stewart. STEWART, Margaret, born 25 Dec. 1424, died Châlons, France, 16 Aug. 1445; Isabella, died 1494; Eleanor, died 20 Nov 1480; Joanna, died after 1486; Mary, died 20 March 1465; Annabella, fl. 1444–71. Princesses of Scotland. Daughters of *Joan Beaufort and James I. These Stewart princesses were valuable commodities on the European marriage market. The eldest, Margaret, married Louis (1423–83), heir to Charles VII of France, on 25 June 1436. The Dauphin disliked his wife, but Margaret was a favourite of the French king and queen and well regarded by her contemporaries. A member of court literary and musical circles, she devoted much time to writing poetry, though none survives. Isabella married Duke Francis I of Brittany on 30 October 1442. Widowed in 1450, with two daughters, she resisted plans for her remarriage by James II, Charles VII and the Bretons, preferring life on her dowager estates of Succinio. Isabella became a noted patron, collecting at least four Books of Hours (two probably made at her direction) and commissioning at least one devotional work. Eleanor was invited to the French court as a possible bride for the King of the Romans. She eventually married Sigismund, Archduke of Austria-Tyrol, by proxy on 8 September 1448. Politically active and capable, she acted as regent

during Sigismund’s absence in the mid-1450s. Her letter collection and literary patronage reveal her literacy in Scots, German, Latin and French. She owned devotional works and romances and was responsible for a French-German translation of the romance Pontus und Sidonia. Joanna’s betrothal to the third Earl of Angus in 1440 was later dissolved. She accompanied Eleanor to France in 1445 but did not marry there. James II recalled her to Scotland in 1458. She married James Douglas of Dalkeith (d. 1493), first Earl of Morton, before 15 May 1459 and bore four children. Later accounts reported her to have been mute. Mary became Countess of Buchan in her own right and married Wolfaert van Borselen, son of the Lord of Veere, Admiral of the Burgundian fleet, in 1444. Their two sons died young. Annabella was betrothed to Louis, Count of Geneva, son of the Duke of Savoy, on 14 December 1444. After living in the Duchess of Savoy’s household from 1445 until 1456, her betrothal was dissolved, probably at James II’s request. She left Savoy unwillingly, returning to Scotland with Joanna in 1458. Before 15 May 1459, Annabella married George Gordon, Master of Huntly (1440/1–1501), who had divorced *Elizabeth Dunbar, Countess of Moray. Annabella was divorced in 1471, after bearing several children. fd • Downie, F. A. (2006) She is but a Woman: queenship in Scotland, 1424–1463, (1999) ‘“La voie quelle menace tenir”: Annabella Stewart, Scotland, and the European marriage market, 1444–56’, Scot. Hist. Rev., 78; Dunlop, A. I. (1950) The Life and Times of James Kennedy, Bishop of St Andrews; ODNB (2004) (see Margaret of Scotland) (Bibl.). STEWART, Margaret, born c. 1460, died c. 1503. Princess of Scotland. Daughter of *Mary of Guelders and James II. The young Princess Margaret was sent to the convent of Haddington for ‘education’ in 1464. Marriage was proposed to the English Duke of Clarence in 1477 and in 1478 to Earl Rivers, brother-in-law of Edward IV of England. Despite further negotiations in 1482, Margaret never left Scotland. For ‘personal reasons’ of the princess – and possibly rumours that she was of ‘unfavourable character’– the marriage was opposed. In fact, she had been seduced by the already married William, 3rd Lord Crichton. In 1483, she gave birth to an illegitimate daughter, *Margaret Crichton. She was at court in 1493, but by 1494 had moved to the convent of Elcho, which received £67 annually for her expenses. In 1503 she is recorded as being in

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Hamilton, perhaps having left the convent due to illness. kp

Church; ODNB (2004) (Bowes, Elizabeth; Knox, John); SP, vi, p. 514.

• Bain, J. (ed.) (1881–8) Calendar of Documents Relating to Scotland, vol. 4; ER; Nicholson, R. (1974) Scotland: the later Middle Ages; Rymer, T. (ed.) (1704–35) Foedera, Conventiones, Literae, vol. 12; TA, vol. 1.

STEWART, Margaret Enid Crichton,‡ n. Mitchell,

STEWART, Margaret, of Ochiltree, c. 1548–1611. Wife of and assistant to John Knox. Daughter of Agnes Cunningham, and Andrew Stewart, 2nd Lord Ochiltree. Margaret Stewart was only 16 or 17 years old when in March 1564 she married the minister and Protestant reformer John Knox (c. 1514–72) who was then about 50 years old. His first wife had been the Englishwoman Marjory Bowes (d. Dec. 1560), daughter of Elizabeth (n. Aske) and Richard Bowes, captain of Norham Castle on the English Border. John Knox was a good friend of Elizabeth Bowes who encouraged his marriage to her daughter, probably in spring 1556, despite her husband’s opposition to the match. She accompanied the couple to Geneva in 1556. Well-educated, Marjory Bowes acted as secretary for her husband. A happy marriage ended with her early death. Elizabeth Bowes cared for her two grandchildren in Scotland from 1562 until 1564, and stayed in contact with John Knox and his family until her own death in 1568. John Knox’s second marriage was deemed a very godly match as Margaret Stewart came from a strongly Protestant family. Few remarked on the big age-gap between them, but the disparity in their social status was commented upon as she was a noblewoman and he of mercantile stock. Moreover, as *Mary, Queen of Scots pointed out, Margaret Stewart was distantly related to the royal family. It was neither a platonic marriage, nor a marriage of convenience, for they had three daughters. In Margaret Stewart’s view, she had married the hero of the Reformation. Like his first wife, she acted as secretary to her husband; she also nursed him in his final years. Two years after John Knox’s death, in January 1574, she married the fervently Protestant Border laird, Sir Andrew Ker of Faldonside. Margaret Stewart no doubt remarried for godly reasons, but she would also have wanted protection for her young children. She had several more children by her second husband. mmm

• NRS: CC8/8/33, CC8/8/48, fos 71r-v, Edinburgh Commissary Court, Testaments. Newman, C. M. (1990) ‘The Reformation and Elizabeth Bowes: a study of a sixteenth-century northern gentlewoman’, in W. J. Sheils and D. Wood (eds) Women in the

MBE, born Trivandrum, Travancore, India 28 Feb. 1907, died Perth 3 June 1986. Archaeologist and heritage campaigner. Daughter of Agnes Robertson, and Alexander Crichton Mitchell, meteorologist. Shortly after her birth in India, Margaret Mitchell’s family returned to Edinburgh. She studied archaeology at the University of Edinburgh under Gordon Childe and was the first recipient of the Class Medal in Archaeology in 1928–9. Her PhD on Bronze Age pottery marked a fresh approach that she pursued throughout her career. Recruited to Admiralty Intelligence during the Second World War, she helped decrypt German Ultra codes in the North African campaign. She married Perth solicitor John Anderson Stewart in 1936. Margaret Stewart contributed greatly to the awareness of Perthshire’s archaeological heritage, leading significant excavations at Moncrieffe Hill, Lundin Farm and Queen’s View. The finds, now in Perth Museum and Art Gallery, always arouse interest, partly thanks to her legacy as a teacher (inspiring a generation of archaeologists in the 1950s and ’60s) and campaigner. Co-founder of the Perth Civic Trust and local archaeological societies including the Breadalbane Heritage Society, she was unwavering in opposing threats to local heritage preservation. She was awarded a DLitt (St Andrews) and an MBE, but she most valued becoming the first woman Honorary Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland. MAH • Perth Museum and Art Gallery: papers and artefacts. Proc. Soc. of Antiquaries Scot., 118 (1988), 1–2 (obit.); Tayside and Fife Archaeological Journal 3 (1997), 5 (1999); http://indicatorloops.com/mitchell_margaret.htm (Bibl.).

born Scotland before 16 May 1452, died Scotland c. May 1488. Princess of Scotland. Daughter of Mary of Guelders and James II. The young Mary Stewart was considered a valuable marriage commodity. When *Mary of Guelders met Margaret of Anjou, the Lancastrian Queen of England, in 1460, she suggested her daughter marry Prince Edward, heir to the throne. Lancastrian defeat in the Wars of the Roses ended the proposal. Mary’s limited dowry made a foreign marriage difficult. In 1467 the Boyd family, who dominated politics during James III’s minority, arranged her marriage to Lord Thomas Boyd, created Earl of Arran, despite the king’s opposition.

STEWART, Mary,

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The couple had a son and a daughter. Her brother, James III, distrusting the Boyds, opposed the marriage. When the Earl arrived back in Scotland from Denmark in 1469 with James’s bride, *Margaret of Denmark, Mary warned him of danger and together they fled to Denmark, then to Bruges. The Earl of Arran and several relatives were charged with treason in November 1469. Returning to Scotland in 1471, Mary Stewart married James Lord Hamilton in 1474, probably following Thomas Boyd’s death. The marriage produced a daughter and a son. Her Hamilton descendants were frequently heirs-presumptive to the throne. ech • MacDougall, N. (1982) James III; Nicholson, R. (1974) Scotland in the Later Middle Ages; ODNB (2004) (Boyd family); TA, vol. 1. STEWART, Mary Florence Elinor (Lady Stewart), n. Rainbow, born Sunderland 17 Sept. 1916, died Loch

Awe 9 May 2014. Author. Daughter of Mary Edith Matthews, and Rev. Frederick Albert Rainbow, Anglican priest. Mary Rainbow was reading and making up stories aged 3. At Durham University she was president of the Women’s Union, graduating with first-class honours (English) before teaching in north-east England from 1941 to 1956. In 1945 she married scientist Frederick Stewart (1916–2001) and they moved to Edinburgh in 1956, where Frederick (Kt. 1974) became professor of geology and ­mineralogy. They also acquired a house beside Loch Awe, where they pursued their shared love of nature, the arts and classical history.  Mary Stewart’s first novel, Madam, Will You Talk? (1955), introduced a strong, independent woman as the main character. Nine Coaches Waiting, This Rough Magic, The Moon-Spinners and other bestselling suspense novels followed. Their settings reflected her passion for travel (though retiring by nature, she loved fast cars). The Crystal Cave (1970) began a series of five imaginative, scholarly novels retelling Arthurian tales. A lost novella, The Wind off the Small Isles, was published in 2016. She also wrote poetry and successful children’s books – Ludo and the Star Horse won a SAC Award. Mary Stewart’s novels sold millions of copies, but she referred to herself as simply a ‘storyteller . . . an old and honourable title . . .’ (Hall Page 2011). Her favourite storytellers were Mary Renault and John Buchan. Her honours included FRSA (1968), fellow of Newnham College (1986), PEN Award (2006), DLitt (Durham, 2009) and

Lifetime Achievement Award (2006) at the Scottish Parliament. KMD • London Metropolitan Archives: CLC/B/119; NLS: Acc. 9565. Stewart, M., Works as above; Hall Page, K. (2011) ‘Mary Stewart, teller of tales’, Mystery Scene, 120, https://mysteryscenemag.com (Bibl.). ‘Off the Page – Mary Stewart’, Interview by Jenny Brown, Culture and Literature series, STV, 2010. Films: The Moon-Spinners, 1964 (US), Merlin of the Crystal Cave (BBC TV, 1991). The Guardian, 15 May 2014, New York Times, 15 May 2014, The Telegraph, 15 May 2014 (obits). STEWART, Murdina (Ena) Lamont see LAMONT STEWART, Murdina (1912–2006) STEWART, Olga Margaret, n. Mounsey, born Edinburgh 1 July 1920, died New Abbey, Dumfries, 6 August 1998. Botanist and botanical artist. Daughter of Marjory Brookfield from Nova Scotia, and James Mounsey, lawyer. One of two daughters, Olga Mounsey was educated at schools in Edinburgh and Kent before studying architecture at ECA. At the outbreak of war in 1939, she was in Nova Scotia where she remained until 1943, studying engineering for a year at Dalhousie University, then working as a draughtswoman at Halifax naval dockyard for the National Research Council of Canada. Returning to Edinburgh, she worked for the Royal Navy. In 1946, she married Frank Stewart, an Edinburgh lawyer, who was later Scottish consul for the principality of Monaco. By her own account, she started drawing flowers in 1947 while pregnant with her first child (she had four children, one of whom became a professional botanist). It remained a hobby until she joined the Wildflower Society in 1965 and the BSBI in 1967. She quickly became an expert field botanist, in 1975 being appointed botanical recorder for Kirkcudbrightshire (where the family had a holiday home) and publishing her checklist of Flowering Plants of Kirkcudbrightshire in 1990. Her botanical illustrations appear in many BSBI publications, in Mary M. Webster’s Flora of Moray, Nairn and East Inverness (1978) and in Princess Grace of Monaco’s My Book of Flowers (1980). She also enjoyed curling, and represented Scotland on a tour of western Canada in 1967, continuing to play in Edinburgh until 1996. jm

• Haines, C. M. and Stevens, H. (2001) International Women in Science, p. 302; Jermy, A. C. (1999) ‘Olga Margaret Stewart

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STEWART SMITH 1920–1998’, Watsonia, 22, 4; (1999) ‘In Memoriam: Olga M. Stewart 1920–1998’, BSBI Scottish Newsletter, 21. Private information: Frank Stewart, husband.

n. James, born Edinburgh 1839, died Edinburgh 1 Dec. 1925. Artist, illustrator, amateur historian. Daughter of Eliza Cuthbertson, and William Henry Spinks James, corn merchant. In 1862, Jane James married John Smith (later John Stewart Smith), an Edinburgh carver, gilder and picture dealer and keen amateur photographer. Shortly afterwards, she began recording the early morning life of Edinburgh’s Old Town in some 60 watercolours to ‘catch the reverberating echoes of the past as they linger round the old historic buildings’ (Butchart 1951, p. xx). These vivid paintings in the picturesque tradition, not made for sale, were given to Edinburgh Public Library (CPL) in 1932 by her friend Catherine Roberts, a retired dressmaker. Until the later 1890s, the Stewart Smiths lived in south Edinburgh, which prompted her to research, write and illustrate The Grange of St Giles (1898). By that date the Stewart Smiths were living in Portobello where their house, named ‘Fairyville’, referenced her interest in spiritualism. After her husband’s death in 1921, she wrote a second book, Historic Stones and Stories of bygone Edinburgh (1924) ‘in affectionate remembrance of our 59 years of happy wedded life’. Illustrated ‘with pen, pencil and camera’ by her, the books were designed and printed by T. & A. Constable, published at her own expense, and still provide useful antiquarian references. ec

STEWART SMITH, Janet Eliza (Jane),

• Stewart Smith, J. E., Works as above. Butchart, R. (1951) The Edinburgh Scene: catalogue of prints and drawings in the Edinburgh Room (CPL). STEWART-MURRAY, Lady Dorothea, m. RugglesBrise, born London 25 March 1866, died Vence,

Alpes-Maritimes, 28 Dec. 1937, on a visit to France. Music collector. Daughter of Louisa Moncreiffe, and John, 7th Duke of Atholl. The eldest daughter of the Duke of Atholl, a promoter of Gaelic language and culture, Lady Dorothea Stewart-Murray grew up with her two brothers and two sisters in a family with a strong interest in local song and folklore. Her sister *Lady Evelyn Stewart-Murray was an avid collector of Gaelic tales and poetry. Lady Dorothea began collecting Scottish music in her girlhood and continued her collecting throughout her busy life. Her family had earlier been the patrons of the great

fiddler Niel Gow and his music and that of his family, which formed an important part of the collection. He wrote tunes for members of the Duke of Atholl’s family and for family occasions. Dorothea Stewart-Murray married an English army officer, Harold Ruggles-Brise, on 5 February 1895 and went to live in London, where her collecting continued unabated. Knowledgeable and skilled, she gathered most of the 18th- and 19thcentury song and tune collections for all the instruments, including pipes, fiddle and harp, along with poetry and ephemera, including some interesting MS material. In London she had a busy social life, as her husband climbed the promotion ladder. She also kept in touch with her family in Perthshire, which she often visited. She bequeathed her collection of over 600 books and manuscripts to the Sandeman Library (now the A. K. Bell Library) in Perth. SMD oug • A. K. Bell Library, Perth: Atholl Collection. Douglas, S. (comp.) (1999) The Atholl Collection Catalogue, Perth and Kinross Libraries. STEWART-MURRAY, Lady Evelyn, born Blair Castle 17 March 1868, died Easter Moncreiffe 20 July 1940. Gaelic folktale collector. Daughter of Louisa Moncreiffe, and John, 7th Duke of Atholl. Like her siblings, including *Dorothea Stewart-Murray, Lady Evelyn Stewart-Murray was a Gaelic speaker and surrounded by Gaelic from childhood. Her father was fluent and enthusiastically supported the language; all estate workers spoke Gaelic. By the age of 19, her lifelong interest in Gaelic had developed strongly. From 1887 to 1891 she collected tales and songs from the Perthshire Gaels. Her serious academic study grew so intense that her parents became deeply concerned for her health. Her mother, apparently indifferent to Gaelic, disapproved of what she saw as an obsession which distracted her from the normal life of an aristocratic girl. Even her father, delighted at her ardent affection for Gaelic, demurred at her overstudy. A highly strung, headstrong girl, she suffered severe psychosomatic illnesses when not allowed to follow her chosen career. In December 1891, aged 23, she was sent to Switzerland in the hopes of restoring her health. Not wishing to return home, she settled in Belgium until the Second World War when she moved to London. Shortly before her death, her brother brought her to his home at Easter Moncreiffe. Lady Evelyn was a brilliant needlewoman; her collection of embroidery and lace,

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which she had sent home from Europe for the opening of Blair Castle to the public in 1936, can still be seen there today. Lady Evelyn’s magnum opus is a collection of 250 tales, legends and songs. Her methods show her competence and a scientific approach: the salient characteristics of Perthshire Gaelic – a dialect now dead – are faithfully recorded. The work, the only 19th-century collection by a woman, and the only one covering that region, is her enduring monument. jm ac i • School of Scottish Studies, Univ. of Edinburgh: Lady Evelyn Stewart-Murray Collection. Stewart-Murray, E. (2009) Tales from Highland Perthshire, S. Robertson and T. Dilworth (eds). Anderson, J. (ed.) (1991) Chronicles of the Atholl and Tullibardine Families, vol. 6 (1907–1957); ODNB (2004); Robertson, S. and Young, P. (2007) Daughter of Atholl.

born Edinburgh 1838/9, died Coatesville, Pennsylvania, USA, 2 Sept. 1907. Child philanthropist, anti-cruelty campaigner. Daughter of Elizabeth Willing, and John Stirling, landed gentleman. Emma Stirling grew up in St Andrews, the youngest of 11 children, six of whom died during her youth. Of strong Christian convictions, she published moralistic children’s literature. Receipt of an inheritance brought her to Edinburgh, where in 1877 she opened the Stockbridge Day Nursery, for working mothers, and Infant Home, for motherless children. In 1878, the latter was renamed the Edinburgh and Leith Children’s Aid and Refuge Society. Expanding into care of abused children, she opened a Shelter from Cruelty, which eclipsed local efforts to establish an Edinburgh SPCC. By 1886, she had opened two further boys’ homes, two girls’ homes and a training farm, catering in all for 300 children. Extension of her work to Canada in 1886 was prompted by the need for a cheap outlet for increasing numbers. Hillfoot Farm at Aylesford, in Nova Scotia’s Annapolis Valley, was purchased, and in 1887 Emma Stirling moved to Canada. Small parties were sent out until April 1895, when Hillfoot was destroyed by an arsonist, after which she moved to the USA. She was unpopular with her Edinburgh colleagues, whom she had abruptly abandoned in 1887, with parents whose children she removed without consent, and with Nova Scotians who resented her patronising and litigious attitude. This has contributed to the loss from the record of a prickly, perhaps injudicious, but forceful pioneer. mdh

STIRLING, Emma Maitland,

died Perth 27 Jan. 1544. Executed for blasphemy. Daughter of John Stirk, skinner burgess. Hellen Stirk was married to James Ranaldsone, a skinner burgess of Perth. The couple had one son and two daughters. She was drowned in the Tay in January 1544 for blasphemy and for her association with five men of Perth (including her husband), who were accused of breaking the Acts of Parliament by disputing upon the scriptures. The specific charge against Hellen Stirk was that she had refused to call upon the Virgin Mary in childbirth, thereby tarnishing the reputation, and discrediting the merits, of the mother of Christ. She witnessed the men’s executions, being refused her request to die with her husband. She was led to the river, carrying her daughter, some reports say suckling the child. The baby was handed to a wet nurse before her mother was drowned. Hellen Stirk’s mother took custody of the orphaned children, recovered the family’s forfeited goods, and administered their affairs until her own death in 1551. mv

• NRS: GD 409/1, RSSPCC Fonds, Minutes of Meeting of the Directors of the Edinburgh & Leith Children’s Aid and Refuge. Stirling, E. M. (1868) The History of a Pin, (1892) Our Children in Old Scotland and Nova Scotia. Girard, P. (2000) ‘Victorian philanthropy and child rescue: the career of Emma Stirling in Scotland and Nova Scotia, 1860–95’, in M. Harper and M. E. Vance (eds) Myth, Migration and the Making of Memory, pp. 218–31; ODNB (2004).

• A. K. Bell Library, Perth and Kinross Council Archive: B59/12/3, Perth Burgh Court Records, Register of Decreets, Nov. 1547 to Nov. 1552; NRS: B59/1/1, Protocol Book of Sir Henry Elder; Perth Museum and Art Gallery: The Convener Court Book of Perth, item 34. Calderwood, D. [1678] (1842) The History of the Kirk of Scotland, T. Thompson, ed.; Foxe, J. [1559] (1838) The Acts and Monuments of John Foxe, S. Cattley, ed.; RSS, vol. 3 no. 609. Verschuur, M. (2006) Politics or Religion? The Reformation in Perth, 1540–1570.

STIRLING, Jane Wilhelmina, born Kippenross House, Dunblane, baptised 8 April 1804, died Calder House, Mid Calder, 6 Feb. 1859. Pupil and friend of Frederic Chopin. Daughter of Mary Graham of Airth, and John Stirling, 6th Laird of Kippendavie and Kippenross. The youngest of 13 children, Jane Stirling was cared for by her elder widowed sister, Katherine Erskine, after her parents died. Attractive, a skilful

STIRK (STARK), Hellen (Ellen, Elena),

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pianist and harpist, with a strong personality, she is said to have received more than 30 marriage proposals. In 1826, she and Katherine travelled to Paris where they joined the Protestant community, both sisters being Francophiles and fluent in French. Chopin agreed to give Jane Stirling piano lessons in about 1842. He was still with George Sand at the time, but when they parted, Jane Stirling took on a role in his life as virtual business manager and concert agent. In April 1848, she arranged for Chopin to perform in London, Glasgow, Edinburgh and Manchester. His letters tell of a bewildering round of visits to Scottish stately homes during this tour. He was already unwell, however, and returned to Paris in November, dying 11 months later from tuberculosis. Jane Stirling, who apparently cherished an unrequited love for Chopin, gave him financial support and is thought to have arranged and paid for his funeral out of her own pocket. She bought his effects when they were auctioned in Paris, shipping some of his furniture to Calder House, where she set up a Chopin Room in his memory. Her grave is in Dunblane Cathedral. mb • Bone, A. E. (1960) Jane Wilhelmina Stirling ; Eisler, B. (2003) Chopin’s Funeral; Jorgenson, C. and J. (2003) Chopin and the Swedish Nightingale ; Szulk, T. (2001) Chopin in Paris; Walker, A. (1972) ‘When Chopin came to Scotland’, Scottish Field, August, pp. 20–21. STIRLING GRAHAM, Clementina, born Seagate, Dundee, 4 May 1782, died Duntrune House, Angus, 23 August 1877. Impersonator, author, translator, beekeeper. Daughter of Amelia Graham and Patrick Stirling Graham. Clementina Stirling Graham’s father added the surname Graham in 1802, in order to inherit Duntrune House. In 1844, her brother William died and she became heiress to the estate. Wellconnected as part of the Graham clan, whose forebear was John Graham of Claverhouse (‘Bonnie Dundee’), she was cousin to the 9th Countess of Airlie, and godmother to her cousin’s grand-­daughter Blanche Ogilvy, future mother of Clementina Churchill. While young, it seems she lost the man she loved, possibly at sea, and never married. One obituarist wrote: ‘Clementina Stirling Graham was an heiress, beautiful and intelligent – why did she never marry?’ concluding ‘perhaps for those very reasons’ (DCL archives). In 1829, she received the Highland Society Award for her translation of Jonas de Gélieu’s The Bee Preserver, and taught local farmers how to extract honey without

killing the bees. Well known in Edinburgh for her wit and her impersonations, she captivated such literary and legal giants as Sir Walter Scott, Lords Jeffrey, Gillies and Cockburn, and successfully duped the then Mr Jeffrey in 1821, by calling on him as the elderly ‘Lady Pitlyal’. She is credited with the remark: ‘The only way to deal with temptation is to give in to it’. When friends persuaded her to write her memoirs, her book Mystifications was published privately in 1859 and by Dr John Brown in 1865. It became a bestseller (‘no parlour complete without it’) and went into five printings. hk • Dundee Central Library (DCL) archives: Box 398, local history dept., newscuttings and biog. notices; Univ. of Dundee Archives: MS 113, Corr. of Clementina Stirling Graham; other corr. in private hands. Graham, C. S., Works as above. DWT; ODNB (2004). STOPES, Charlotte Carmichael [Leitea Reseda],

n. Carmichael, born Edinburgh 5 Feb. 1840, died Worthing, Sussex, 6 Feb. 1929. Shakespearean scholar, historian, suffragist, dress reformer. Daughter of Christine Brown Graham, and James Ferrier Carmichael, landscape painter. The youngest of five children, Charlotte Carmichael attended Mr Oliphant’s School and the Normal School, Edinburgh, passing the government teacher training examination. In 1867, after attending Edinburgh Ladies’ Educational Association classes, she was the first Scottish woman to be awarded Ordinary and Honours Certificates of Arts. She taught at Miss Brooke’s Huntley School, gave private classes and worked as a governess. After publishing some early stories in Chambers’ Juvenile Series, she joined the Edinburgh Essay Society (renamed Ladies’ Edinburgh Literary Society in 1869), formed by *Sarah Siddons Mair, contributing to its journal, The Attempt, under the pseudonym ‘Leitea Reseda’. In 1879, she married Henry Stopes, FGS (1851–1902), amateur archaeologist, civil engineer and brewery designer. They travelled in the Middle East, returning to Edinburgh where their daughter, *Marie Stopes, was born (1880). The family then settled in London and a second daughter, Winifred, was born (1884). Charlotte organised a Shakespeare Reading Society, a Logic Class, and home meetings on women’s suffrage and rational dress. An active member of the Rational Dress Society (1888–97), she was also a committed suffragist from the 1870s, joining the NUWSS (1906) and the WSPU (1908) and lecturing on suffrage 418

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throughout Britain, including Scotland (1896). Her history of British women’s rights, British Freewomen (1894), has been described as ‘the single most influential text’ in providing a ‘narrative of loss, resistance and recovery’ (Mayhall 2000) to the militant women’s suffrage movement from 1908. She was a prolific Shakespeare scholar, a vice-president of the Elizabethan Society and member of the New Shakespeare Society. The British Academy awarded her the Rose Crawshay prize for Shakespeare’s Industry (1916) and an Honorary Fellowship. She is buried in Highgate Cemetery, London. KHB • BL: Marie Stopes MSS Coll. and Add. MSS coll., Elizabeth Wolstenholme Elmy Papers; UCL: GB 010, Add. MSS 157, Charlotte Carmichael Stopes, corr. and papers 1888–1926. Stopes, C. C. (1894) British Freewomen: their historical privilege, (1907) The Sphere of ‘Man’ in relation to that of ‘Woman’ in the Constitution, (1916) Shakespeare’s Industry. (For Bibl., see BL catalogue.) Boas, J. S. (1931) ‘Charlotte Carmichael Stopes’, Trans. Roy. Soc. Lit., X; Green, S. (2013) The Public Lives of Charlotte and Marie Stopes (Bibl.); Mayhall, L. E. N. (2000) ‘Defining militancy: radical protest, the constitutional idiom, and women’s suffrage in Britain, 1908–1909’ Journal of British Studies 39 (3), pp. 340–71; ODNB (2004); Tooley, S. ‘Flints, suffrage and higher education’, Woman’s Signal, 6 June 1894; WSM. STOPES, Marie Charlotte Carmichael, m1 Gates, m2 Roe, born Edinburgh 15 Oct. 1880, died Dorking

2 Oct. 1958. Pioneer of birth control. Daughter of *Charlotte Carmichael, campaigner for women’s education, and Henry Stopes, architect and archaeologist. Marie Stopes was educated at St George’s School, Edinburgh, then at North London Collegiate School, both of which offered girls a broad curriculum. At University College London, she gained a BSc in botany and geology in 1902, and two years later was awarded a PhD in Munich for work on fossilised plants. She continued her outstanding academic career, as lecturer in botany at the University of Manchester in 1904, and the youngest DSc in the country in 1905. From 1907 to 1908 she carried out research at the University of Tokyo. As her scientific career flourished (including later war work on the composition of coal), she was also writing poetry and fiction. In March 1911, she married Reginald Ruggles Gates (1882–1962), a botanist whom she had met in Canada. This unhappy marriage became the catalyst to the campaigning and writing for which she is best remembered. In 1914, she had her marriage annulled on the grounds

that it had never been consummated, alleging that her ignorance about sex meant she took two years to realise that her husband was impotent and herself still a virgin. Whether or not her claims were accurate, the experience undoubtedly inspired Married Love (1918), her book about sex and equality in the marriage relationship. She could not at first find a publisher, but Lt. Humphrey Verdon Roe (1877–1949), soon to be her second husband (1918), financed its publication. It was a huge success, and later that year she published Wise Parenthood, dealing more explicitly with birth control. Marie Stopes already knew Margaret Sanger, the US birth control pioneer, and with Humphrey Roe, who shared her interests, opened the UK’s first birth control clinic in London in 1921. More clinics followed, and she continued to promote birth control in her writing and in public speaking, becoming a famous, if controversial, figure. She clashed with members of the medical profession and the Catholic Church, notably being involved in a much-publicised libel case in 1923, but successfully broke many taboos by introducing public discussion of the issues, which included eugenics (her approval for which caused later criticism). Her son, Harry, was born on 27 March 1924 when she was over 40 (a previous child was stillborn). Her private life, never calm, included some estrangement from husband and son, and several later relationships. Her forceful personality often made it hard for her to work closely with others involved in family planning; her later writings never matched the popularity of Married Love and Wise Parenthood, nor were her literary ambitions particularly fulfilled, but she was undoubtedly a major force in the spread of contraception in Britain, at a time when few dared speak of it. FJ • Stopes, M., Works as above, and see Bibls. Hall, R. (1977) Marie Stopes; Rose, J. (1992) Marie Stopes and the Sexual Revolution (Bibl.); ODNB (2004) (Bibl.). STRATHERN, Christine see MORRISON, Agnes Brysson Inglis (Nancy) (1903–1986) STRATHIE, Dame Lesley Ann, n. Cooke, DCB, born Stranraer 24 Sept. 1955, died London 14 Jan. 2012. Civil servant, head of HMRC. Daughter of Agnes Parker, and Rumold Francis Cooke, fire officer. Having been dux at Stranraer Academy, Lesley Cooke left school at 16 for a post as junior clerk in her local DHSS office. She worked there and in the Ayr Unemployment Benefit Office until 1984,

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when she moved to Dagenham, London, to a promoted post as benefit supervisor. She had married David Strathie (b. 1948) in 1974, and they had two children. Her administrative ability was noticed and she moved through a sequence of civil service posts, always associated with employment and unemployment during difficult times, culminating in becoming chief executive of the Jobcentre Plus, with permanent secretary rank, in 2005. It was extremely rare at the time for a non-graduate to rise through the ranks of the civil service to this level. In 2008, Lesley Strathie was invited by the head of the civil service, Sir Gus O’Donnell, to apply for the post of chief executive of what was then the troubled HM Revenue and Customs. She fulfilled this post for three years in trying circumstances, under criticism and pressure from ministers, MPs and the media, working to remedy problems not primarily of her making. She was described by staff as always seeking to improve the service and taking full responsibility. She was obliged to resign in November 2011 because of recurrent cancer. Divorced in 1996, she was engaged to her partner Kevin White (b. 1950) at the time of her death. O’Donnell, recognising her substantial and often underestimated contribution to turning around HMRC, created the Dame Lesley Strathie award in her memory. SR • The Guardian, 27 Feb. 2012, The Herald, 26 Jan 2012, The Scotsman, 20 Jan. 2012 (obits); eODNB. STRONG, Rebecca, n. Thorogood, OBE, born Aldgate, London, 23 August 1843, died Chester 24 April 1944. Hospital matron, pioneer of nurse training. Daughter of Mary Westell, and John Thorogood, innkeeper. Rebecca Thorogood, although born in England, spent most of her life in Scotland. She married Andrew Strong (1841–65), an instrument maker, but was widowed with a daughter by the age of 23. In 1867, she trained at the Nightingale School of Nursing, St Thomas’s Hospital, London. In 1873, she was appointed Matron of Dundee Royal Infirmary with a remit to improve the training of its nurses and in 1879, she became Matron of Glasgow Royal Infirmary (GRI), where a course of lectures on medical and surgical nursing had just started. Seeing the point of systematic training, she persuaded the GRI Board to drop fees for the lecture course, to attract more probationers. She also obtained approval for introducing nurses’ uniform. When plans for a new nurses’ home were delayed, she left to set

up a private nursing home in 1884, but was reappointed in 1891. In 1892, she collaborated with William Macewen, the world-renowned brain surgeon at GRI, to devise a new systematic training course with regular examinations. Introduced in 1893, the course included three months’ preliminary training, a more advanced programme of lectures, clinical and surgical demonstrations and ward work, then two years as a probationer, before certification. The scheme became a model for nurse training in hospitals internationally. Known as ‘Mamma’ to the medical staff at GRI, Rebecca Strong retired in 1907 but maintained an active interest in nursing, co-founding the Glasgow Scottish Nurses’ Club in Glasgow (1918) and chairing the inaugural dinner of the GRI Nurses’ League (1921). She continued to attend conferences and give interviews well into old age. She was awarded the OBE in 1939. jlmj • DWT; Jenkinson, J. et al. (1994) The Royal: the history of Glasgow Royal Infirmary; Maclachlan, G. (ed.) (1987) Improving the Common Weal; McGann, S. (1992) Battle of the Nurses; ODNB (2004).

born London 12 August 1757, died London 4 August 1851. Writer. Daughter of Mary Wortley Montagu (daughter of the celebrated Lady Mary Wortley Montagu), and John Stuart, 3rd Earl of Bute, Prime Minister to George III in the 1760s. Lady Louisa Stuart was the youngest of 11 children, and remained a lifelong companion to her mother. Her parents’ position in aristocratic society meant that her early years were mostly spent in England, either in London or in the magnificent but sombre Luton Hoo in Sussex. Only when freed from parental restraint by her mother’s death in 1794 could she indulge her love of travel and of Scotland. She continued to live mostly in London – a modest house in Gloucester Place – but made frequent journeys to visit her extensive circle of family and friends north of the border. Though she lived a life of private domesticity, never venturing into the public glare of print, Lady Louisa Stuart was a gifted writer, maintaining a lively correspondence with female friends and with her sister Caroline, who married into the Irish peerage. She was also a correspondent of Walter Scott. She wrote a memoir of her friend and cousin, *Frances Scott, Lady Douglas, and another of the famous *Lady Mary Coke. Her numerous writings, many published after her death, reveal both wit and intelligence in this excellent observer STUART, Lady Louisa,

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of the grand but narrow social world in which she lived. In particular, she wrote about the experience of women in this milieu, in a life spanning both Georgian and Victoria eras. sn

Bell Prize); Zabat: poetics of a family tree (1989); and Sekhmet (2005). A prolific prose writer, she contributed many essays to magazines and journals as well as exhibition catalogues. In her final years, Maud Sulter, who had three children, returned to Scotland, a country to which she remained closely connected. She died from cancer aged 47. AP

• Stuart, L. (1985) Memoire of Frances Lady Douglas, (1901–3) Letters . . . to Miss Louisa Clinton, J. Home, ed., (1863). Some Account of John Duke of Argyll and his Family (reprinted in Coke, Lady M. (1889–96) Letters and Journals); see also BL catalogue. Clark, Mrs G. (ed.) (1895–9) Gleanings from an Old Portfolio, 3 vols; ODNB (2004).

• GWL, Scottish Poetry Library, Stuart Hall Library: holdings by and about Maud Sulter. Sulter, M., Works as above, and (1990) Necropolis. Cherry, D. (ed.) Maud Sulter: passion (2015).

SULTER, Maud,‡ born Glasgow 19 Sept. 1960, died Dumfries 27 Feb. 2008. Visual artist, photographer, writer, cultural activist. Daughter of Elsie Sulter, tramcar conductress, and Claud Ennin, eye surgeon and diplomat. Of Scottish and Ghanaian descent, Maud Sulter left Glasgow at 17 to attend the London College of Fashion, later graduating with MA in Photographic Studies at the University of Derby. A cultural polymath, she co-founded and was active in a range of Black feminist and lesbian projects from the early 1980s, and was uncompromising in her indictment of the inequalities that dogged the creative endeavours of Black women, both historically and in contemporary culture. Her work across several genres explored the terrain of colonialism, the erasure of Black women’s history and the enduring presence of Africa in Europe. From the landmark The Thin Black Line exhibition curated by Lubaina Himid (ICA, London, 1986), to her inclusion in the Johannesburg Biennial (1995), Maud Sulter’s work was widely shown, and is in many private and public collections including the NPG, SNPG, Scottish Parliament and Victoria and Albert Museum. She was the recipient of a Momart fellowship at Tate Liverpool (1990). Maud Sulter joined Lubaina Himid as codirector of the influential Elbow Room Gallery at the end of the 1980s. As both curator and editor, she showcased her own work and that of other Black women creatives in ground-breaking exhibitions such as Zabat (1989) and Syrcas (1993), and publications including Passion: discourses on blackwomen’s creativity (1990). Her photographic works and montages, such as Hysteria (1991), Les Bijoux (2002) and Jeanne Duval: a melodrama (2003) are increasingly read as pioneering (see Cherry 2015). Alongside academic writing, she published a play, Service to Empire (2002), and several collections of poetry: As a Blackwoman (1985, which won the Vera

FRCSEd, born 7 Jan. 1922, died Edinburgh 27 March 2011. Nutritionist and plastic surgeon. Daughter of Margaret Bryson, and David Murdoch Sutherland, draper. Anne Sutherland was educated at Bathgate Academy and St Hilda’s School, Liberton. She hoped to study medicine but her father, thinking this unsuitable for a woman, persuaded her to attend the Edinburgh College of Domestic Science, where she qualified as a dietician in 1941. She subsequently worked as a nutritionist at East Grinstead with the well-known plastic surgeon Sir Archibald McIndoe, who supported her growing interest in plastic surgery. She took her medical degree at the University of Edinburgh (1946–51) and was then able, as a junior doctor and aspiring plastic surgeon, to develop her interest in the role of nutrition in the recovery of patients with burns, guided by the pioneering Scottish surgeon A. B. Wallace. In 1956 she spent a year in an American army burns unit in San Antonio, Texas. Returning to Scotland, she gained her MD in 1958, and in 1963 became a Fellow of the RCSE. Anne Sutherland spent the remainder of her career working in the NHS, in Bangour Hospital and the Royal Hospital for Sick Children in Edinburgh. In 1968 she was the first woman in Britain to be appointed a consultant plastic surgeon, at Bangour Hospital; she helped to design, and remained in charge of, the burn unit there until her retirement in 1987. She undertook a wide range of surgery, though never cosmetic surgery, and built an international reputation for her work on the nutrition of severely burned patients, even preparing special food herself for her seriously ill patients. She was a founder member and first woman chair of the British Burn Association, 1978–82, President of the European Burn Association and, in 1987, the first, and still in 2017 the only, woman President of the British Association of Plastic Surgeons. BEM/JR

SUTHERLAND, Anne Bryson,

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• Lynch, M. (ed.) (2001) The Oxford Companion to Scottish History; ODNB (2004) (see Gower, Elizabeth Leveson-) (Bibl.); Richards, E. (1982) A History of the Highland Clearances, (2000) The Highland Clearances.

SUTHERLAND, Elizabeth, Countess of Sutherland, suo jure, Marchioness of Stafford, Duchess of Sutherland, Duchess-Countess of Sutherland, m. Leveson-Gower, born Leven Lodge near Edinburgh,

died Yarmouth 9 Nov. 1923. Herring packer. Daughter of Margaret Rosie, and Robert Sutherland, sawyer. One of nine children, Greta Sutherland attended Wick North Primary School. Wick was then known as ‘the herring capital of Europe’, and she joined the fishworkers as a packer. She would negotiate a pre-season contract with a curing company on behalf of the gutting ‘crew’ of three women, who processed the fresh catches (see Cordiner, Helen). Two women gutted and graded, while the packer, bent almost double into a wooden barrel, salted and packed the fish to Crown Brand standards, then topped up barrels at the end of the pickling process, and received an end-of-season bonus. Efficient packing was essential to successful preservation and work was rigorously inspected. Greta Sutherland and her sister Barbara worked at local herring fishing stations, and she also travelled south to work. In 1910, she married Donald Macdonald, carter (1885–1915); two of their four children died in a measles epidemic in 1912. He enlisted in 1914, but died from injuries sustained at Loos: his was the first military funeral of the war in Wick. Widowed, Greta Sutherland returned to work. Aged 32, she contracted meningitis, and died in Yarmouth, two weeks before the herring season ended, leaving a daughter and son. The Factories Acts did not cover outdoor employment: inadequate facilities and crowded accommodation increased the possibility of disease. She is buried in Wick Cemetery, beside her husband. mr

24 May 1765, died London 29 Jan. 1839. Landlord associated with the Sutherland Clearances. Daughter of Mary Maxwell, and William, Earl of Sutherland. Elizabeth Sutherland succeeded as Countess of Sutherland as an infant and was brought up in Edinburgh by her maternal grandmother, Lady Alva. There were two other claimants to the peerage but the House of Lords found in her favour in 1771. On 4 September 1785, she married George Granville Leveson-Gower (1758–1833), Viscount Trentham, who, in 1803, inherited the Bridgewater Canal, making him one of the country’s richest men, and succeeded as Marquess of Stafford. The couple had eight children and spent some time in Paris during the Revolution, when he was ambassador 1790–2. They became Duke and Duchess of Sutherland in 1833, just before George’s death. In 1799, the Countess raised a regiment, the 93rd Sutherland Highlanders, from her Scottish lands. Difficulties with this prompted the formulation of a far-reaching plan to develop the Sutherland estates and increase the rental income, involving clearing the interior for sheep and the better lowland ground for arable farms. Those cleared were to be resettled elsewhere on the estate where they would acquire new ‘habits of industry’. Considerable investment was made in establishing villages, infrastructure, and industrial development. Remarkable in scale, the Sutherland Clearances also attracted considerable criticism, particularly for the manner in which they were carried out, including the death of *Margaret Mackay in the 1814 Strathnaver clearance. Although much opprobrium attached to the estate managers, the Countess herself has been described as ‘the principal source of energy and intellect behind the Sutherland clearances’ (Richards 2000, p.120), though increasingly subject to the commissioner James Loch’s influence. Known in the north as Ban-mhorair Chataibh, the Great Lady of Sutherland, she was, nevertheless, apparently described in 1820 as a ‘benign Princess over her very considerable territory’ (Richards 1982, p.345). mb-j

SUTHERLAND, Margaret Sinclair (Greta), m. Macdonald, born Wick, Caithness, 2 May 1891,

• Fairrie, A. [1983] (1998 rev. edn.) History of Queen’s Own Highlanders (Seaforth and Cameron); John O’Groats Journal, 15 Oct. 1915. Private information.

CBE, born Banchory 30 Nov. 1895, died East Kilbride, 19 Oct. 1972. Trade unionist and Labour Party activist. Daughter of Jessie Henderson and Alexander Sutherland, crofters. Despite deputising for her sick mother, who died in 1911, Mary Sutherland won bursaries to Aberdeen Girls’ High School and the University of Aberdeen, graduating in 1917 and

SUTHERLAND, Mary Elizabeth,

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qualifying to teach in 1918. However, she soon moved into politics, as organiser (1920–2) of the Scottish Farm Servants’ Union and working on the left-wing weekly, Forward (1923). In 1924, she became Labour Party woman’s organiser for Scotland. In 1932, she took over from Marion Phillips as Labour Party Chief Woman’s Officer, secretary to the Standing Joint Committee of Industrial Women’s Organisations (SJC) and editor of Labour Woman, moving to London. She held the posts until her retirement in 1960. The SJC combined Labour Party, trades union and Co-operative women, tackling issues such as married women’s right to work, equal pay, social policy and war-time evacuation. Mary Sutherland’s engagement in socialist internationalism was lifelong. She had been delegate to the International Federation of Landworkers, meeting in Vienna, in 1922. In 1933, she became British correspondent to the Women’s Advisory Committee of the Labour and Socialist International (LSI). After the Second World War, she became chair of the International Council of Social Democratic Women (successor to the LSI committee), and continued to attend meetings after her retirement. When she retired, Labour Party women’s organisation was changed. Bessie Braddock MP moved the tribute to her at the 1960 Labour Party conference. Suffering a stroke, she returned to Scotland to live near her family. In memory of her work, her name was added to the Marion Phillips International Fund. cc • Univ. of Manchester, John Rylands Library: Labour Party Archives and Study Centre, Mary Sutherland papers and SJC papers. Collette, C. (2000) ‘Questions of gender: Labour and women’, in B. Brivati and R. Heffernan (eds) The Labour Party: a centenary history; DLabB, vol. 6 (Bibl.); Graves, P. M. (1994) Labour Women: women in British working class politics, 1918–1939; ODNB (2004); SLL. SUTHERLAND, Millicent, Duchess of see ST CLAIRERSKINE, Lady Millicent Fanny (1867–1955) SUTHERLAND, Stella Campbell, n. Smith, born

Bressay, Shetland 7 Oct. 1924, died Lerwick 15 Oct. 2015. Poet. Daughter of Elizabeth J. Smith, teacher and folklorist, and William Smith, fisherman. Stella Smith spent her childhood on Mainland, Shetland, then part of her teenage years on Foula, an experience which had a profound effect on her life and writing. As a young woman she worked in Lerwick before marrying farmer Laurence

Sutherland in 1949. They made their home on the island of Bressay and had two daughters. Stella Sutherland always wrote. In the early 1940s, she joined a writing group which shared work by circulating notebooks. Her first published poem appeared in 1942. She became a frequent contributor to the quarterly New Shetlander and monthly Shetland Life magazines, writing both in English and in Shetland dialect, letting the poem dictate the language she used. She also wrote short stories and a regular feature, Through A Croft Window. Her first collection, Aa My Selves, Poems 1940–1980 (1980), took its title from her prizewinning entry in the 1976 Scottish Open Poetry Competition. Her second collection, A Celebration and Other Poems, won the 1992 Shetland Literary Prize. In 2008, Hansel published a poetry pamphlet entitled joy o creation. Stella Sutherland experienced the ‘joy o creation’ not just in her writing, but also in other activities, whether knitting, cooking or making music. This feeling she shared with a much younger Shetland poet, whose work she appreciated and encouraged: Lise Sinclair (1971–2013) from Fair Isle, who forged an international reputation as a poet, composer and song-writer, balancing, as Stella had, a lively creative life with the demands of family and community. MEB • Sutherland, S., Works as above. Anderson, H. (2005) Landskapets lycka: vandringar och poesi i brittiska landskap; The Guardian, 28 Aug. 2013 (obit. Sinclair); New Shetlander Yule, no. 262 (2012); The Scotsman, 29 Oct. 2015 (obit. Sutherland); Smith, M. R. (2014) The Literature of Shetland.

n. Hart, MBE, born Parbold, Lancs., 13 May 1909, died Edinburgh 27 July 2002. Historian of Scottish embroidery, tapestries, and furniture. Daughter of Isabella Johnston, nurse, and John Hart. Margaret Hart was educated at Notre Dame Convent, Wigan, and in 1929 trained as a nurse at St Bartholomew’s Hospital, London, where she met Richard (Dick) H. A. Swain (d. 1981), a bacteriologist, whom she married in 1937. They had three children. In 1947, the family moved to Edinburgh, where Dick Swain had a university post, just before the first International Festival. Margaret Swain had been taught to embroider by her Irish grandmother before she could read, and her historical interest was aroused by the embroidery she found in Scotland. Her first book was The Flowerers: the Story of Ayrshire White Needlework (1955). Thereafter

SWAIN, Margaret Helen,

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she wrote many articles in academic journals, such as The Burlington Magazine, Costume, and others including Scottish Home and Country, aiming to make people aware of the rich heritage of Scottish textiles and furniture. She lectured widely in Scotland and abroad. A pioneer in the history of embroidery in Scotland, as an outsider, Margaret Swain had an eye for what was important. She was a consultant to the national museums in Edinburgh, to the NTS, to many privately owned houses, and to the Palace of Holyroodhouse. Despite tinnitus and deafness, she enjoyed music and working for others, including the Samaritans. She was awarded Hon MA from the University of Edinburgh (1981) and MBE (1989). neat • Swain, M., Work as above, and (1970) Historical Needlework, (1983) The Needlework of Mary Queen of Scots, (1980) Figures on Fabric, (1986) Scottish Embroidery, (1988) Tapestries and Textiles at the Palace of Holyroodhouse in the Royal Collection, (2001, privately printed) Nursing: A Family Tradition. Costume, 37, 2003 (obit.); The Independent, 14 Sept. 2002 (obit.); The Scotsman, 27 August 2002 (obit.). Private information and personal knowledge. SWAN, Annie Shepherd, [Annie S. Swan, David Lyall], CBE, m. Burnett-Smith, born Edinburgh 8 July

1859, died Gullane 17 June 1943. Popular novelist and journalist. Daughter of Euphemia Brown, and Edward Swan, potato merchant. Annie Swan attended a dame school in Edinburgh and later Queen Street Ladies’ College, also spending part of her youth on her father’s farm near Gorebridge. Her novels are imbued with the values of her evangelical upbringing. She began writing in her teens, and a story, ‘Wrongs Righted’, appeared in The People’s Friend magazine in 1881. Her reputation was established with her novel Aldersyde (1883). Her mother died in 1881 and her father remarried. Annie Swan left home in 1883 to marry schoolteacher James Burnett-Smith (1857–1927) and they lived at Star, Markinch, in Fife, before moving to Edinburgh where her husband re-trained as a doctor. After his graduation they moved to London, where their two children were born. In 1910 their son died aged 18, in a shooting accident. Annie Swan was one of the most commercially successful writers of her day. Her novels upheld the ideology of domesticity and the value of hard work, suiting the tastes of a newly literate readership. The exception, The Pendulum (1926), published under her married name, featured the

stresses of wartime on family relationships, but caused consternation to some readers, who valued her fiction because it upheld their conscientious morality. Annie Swan was also the agony aunt in ‘Over the Teacups’ in The British Weekly. Her prolific output of over 200 novels resulted from rising at 6am, writing 3,000 words a day (she never redrafted) – and always meeting copy deadlines. Though she referred to her husband as the ‘head of the household’, she was liberated from the usual constraints of marriage by her earning power – she and her husband always had separate bank accounts. Annie Swan knew she was no literary author but took satisfaction from her readers’ estimate of the difference her fiction made to their lives. As a celebrity, she undertook numerous speaking engagements, often for social or moral causes. After once speaking to women in the East End of Glasgow, she noted, ‘I had to pass through a large crowd to reach my car. Many toil-worn hands were thrust out to grasp mine, and one woman, with a shawl over her head, said unsteadily, “Ye canna dee yet, for we couldna dae without ye”’(Swan 1934). In 1918 she toured the USA for the Ministry of Information to explain the extent of British food shortages. She stood unsuccessfully as a parliamentary candidate for the Liberals in the 1922 election in Maryhill, Glasgow. After James Burnett-Smith died in 1927, she moved to Gullane, East Lothian, with her daughter. She was awarded the CBE in 1930. BD • NLS: Acc. 6003. Swan, A. S., Works as above, and (1881) Wrongs Righted, (1887) The Gates of Eden, (1891) Maitland of Laurieston, (1914) Meg Hamilton, (1932) The Luck of the Livingstones, (1934) My Life; see also HSWW (Bibl.). *ODNB (2004). www.dangerouswomenproject.org/2016/09/08/annieshepherd-swan/; www.kosmoid.net/gorebridge/swan.pdf SWANKIE, Emily Elizabeth, n. Mairs, born

Clydebank 17 Dec. 1915, died Rothesay, Isle of Bute 24 Feb. 2008. Communist activist, campaigner. Daughter of Helen McBrearty, and John Mairs, shoemaker. Emily Swankie became interested in politics at an early age. She joined the ILP Guild of Youth in 1931 and with her mother’s encouragement helped set up a branch in Clydebank in 1932. Emily was politically active for most of the rest of her life. In 1934 she was asked by the NUWM to join the Hunger March from Glasgow

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to London, as part of the Youth contingent to which she was ­delegated leader. She later wrote about her ­experience in Voices from the Hunger March. In 1938 she joined the CP and became a well-known activist in Clydebank. From the 1950s to 1970s, Emily Swankie stood for local council elections as a Communist candidate in Clydebank. She chaired many committees but was motivated ­especially by housing issues and was an active campaigner, for example in the rent strike against the Housing Finance Act of 1972. She was also Chair of her local Tenants’ Association for many years. Also prominent in the rent strike was Violet McGuire (1922–2016), another CP member in Clydebank. From a poor working-class background, widowed young, she was a tireless promoter of many causes, politically active into her 90s. Her activism was characterised by grassroots action rather than committee membership. She was to the forefront in a wide range of organisations and campaigns, from tenants’ associations to the Clydebank Trades Council, the CND, the WEA, and, in her later years, Glasgow Women’s Library. She was a founding member of a women’s writing group in West Dunbartonshire and contributed to two publications, Untold Stories and Working Days. EG/ER • Clydebank Life Story Group (1999) Untold Stories: remembering Clydebank in Wartime, (2006) Working Days: an anthology; Oral history interview with Violet McGuire, 7 [21] Sept. 2014, conducted as part of the History of Working-Class Marriage in Scotland c. 1855–1976, AHRC project, Economic and Social History, University of Glasgow; Swankie, E. (1991) ‘Emily Swankie’, in I. MacDougall (ed.) Voices from the Hunger Marches, vol. 2. Sklair, L. (1975) ‘The struggle against the Housing Finance Act’, Socialist Register 12, pp. 250–92.

born Dufftown, Banffshire 25 Sept. 1863, died Dufftown 27 May 1938. Scots poet. Daughter of Isabella Duncan, and John Symon, saddler and later landowner. Mary Symon was sent at 15 to the Edinburgh Institute for Young Ladies where she encountered Logie Robertson (as ‘Hugh Haliburton’, a well-known Scots poet). She also attended David Masson’s lectures at the University of Edinburgh. However, her grasp of things vernacular emerged from her background among rural and small-town craftsmen and traders among whom Scots was still SYMON, Mary,‡

spoken, even as a mastery of ‘Scottish English’ was encouraged. Her best work is in Scots. She found, like other poets, that the events of the First World War demanded a fresh poetical response, and her finest poem, ‘The Glen’s Muster-Roll’ (written in 1916, before the Somme offensive), is a meditation on the nature of war by the local schoolmaster, who has a natural interest in the ‘loons’ who are the future of the community. It ends with a sinister procession in which his pupils return: ‘For every lauchin’ loon I kent I see a hell-scarred man’, walking on ‘weary, bleedin’ feet’ (Symon 1933, p. 18). The dominie can provide no explanation for their suffering and his former right to demand answers is turned back on him. Like many vernacular poets, Mary Symon published initially in newspapers and magazines. Her first collected edition appeared as late as 1933; entitled Deveron Days it sold out immediately and went straight into a second edition. From an entirely different social background, Lady Margaret Sackville (1881–1963) was an equally radical critic of war through her poetry. English by birth, she spent much of her life in Edinburgh and the Lothians. In 1914 she joined the pacifist Union of Democratic Control, which opposed the secret diplomacy that led to war; members included left-wing Liberals and the leader of the Labour Party, Ramsay MacDonald, with whom she had a long passionate relationship. In the title poem of The Pageant of War (1916), War rides over the bones of men, women and children; in ‘Nostra Culpa’ (pp. 36–9) she accuses women, ‘We mothers and we murderers of mankind’ of complicity in a vile war that deceives and destroys ordinary people on both sides: ‘The self-same light which kindles in our friend/Shines from the faces of our enemy’(‘Quo Vaditis’, pp. 22–3). Her career, lasting until 1960, produced poetry, essays and plays, as well as writing for children. She was the first honorary president of Scottish PEN, and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. CM i /DAM c M • Symon, M., Works as above. Milton, C. (1995) ‘“A sough o’war”: the Great War and the poetry of north-east Scotland’, in D. Hewitt (ed.) Northern Visions; *ODNB (2004); Wheeler L. W. (1985) (ed.) Ten North-East Poets. Sackville, M. (1916) The Pageant of War; (1939) Collected Poems and many more. ODNB (2004) (Bibl.); MSWP (Bibl.); WoM

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T m. Pirie, born Kirkwall, Orkney, 11 Nov. 1918, died Kirkwall 16 April 1999. Film-maker. Daughter of Mary Ibister, and Charles Tait, agricultural merchant. Margaret Tait studied medicine at the University of Edinburgh, graduating in 1941 and serving in the RAMC (1943–6). In the late 1940s she developed a passion for film and went to study in Rome (1950–2). Returning to Scotland, she could not find a place in the British film industry, where there were few opportunities for women to direct. Between 1951 and 1998 she made 32 films, of which all but three were self-financed, initially by locum work. In addition to raising the money, Margaret Tait worked as a one-woman crew. Occasionally she had the help of her lifelong partner, Alex Pirie, whom she married in 1968 and who is credited as producer on Where I am is here (1964). Margaret Tait described herself as a ‘film poet’ (Curtis 1999) rather than a documentarian. Her films sometimes seem like a picture of the past (e.g. Land Makar 1981) but her intention was not so much to document as to create visual poems from sound and image. She developed a very singular‡ style, which is being increasingly recognised as a unique voice within European avant-garde film. In 1992, she had the opportunity, aged 74, to direct her first feature film, Blue Black Permanent, based on a script she first started to write in the 1940s. Filmed in Edinburgh and Orkney, ‘it is beautiful, ingenious, and extraordinarily sad, all at once’ (EIFF Catalogue 2004). She made her last film, Garden Pieces, in 1998, the year before her death. In addition to film-making she published stories and poetry and painted. mjg

TAIT, Margaret,‡

• Orkney Archives: the Tait Papers; Moving Image Archive, NLS. Tait, M. (1959) Origins & Elements, (1960) Subjects & Sequences, (1960) The Hen & The Bees: legends & lyrics; (2012) Margaret Tait: poems, stories and writings, S. Neely (ed.). Select Filmography (not mentioned above): (1955) A Portrait of Ga, (1956) Calypso, (1958) Happy Bees, (1966) Hugh MacDiarmid – A Portrait, (1966) The Big Sheep. Curtis, D. (1999) ‘Britain’s oldest living experimentalist . . . Margaret Tait’, Vertigo, 9, Summer; Edinburgh International Film Festival Catalogue 2004; Neely. S. (2016) Between

Categories: the films of Margaret Tait – poetry, portraits, sound and place; Sandhu, S. ‘Edinburgh Reports: unique vision of a “film poet”’, The Daily Telegraph, 23 Aug. 2004; Todd, P. (1999) ‘A deeper knowledge than wisdom’, Vertigo, 2, 9, Autumn/Winter, (2004) Subjects and Sequences; www.luxonline.org.uk; Todd, P. and Cook, B. (eds) (2004) Subjects and Sequences: a Margaret Tait reader. TAIT BLACK, Janet, n. Coats, born Paisley 15 Feb. 1844, died Underscar House, Keswick 15 Nov. 1918. Philanthropist. Daughter of Margaret Glen, and Thomas Coats, thread manufacturer. Janet Coats’s father had inherited, with his brothers, the Paisley thread-making business that became J&P Coats. Her mother’s sister was *Jane Arthur, n. Glen. Little is known of Janet’s early education: one of ten, she lived at home in Ferguslie House, Paisley, until her marriage in 1884 to James Tait Black (1826–1911), partner in the publishing house of A&C Black, Edinburgh, a widower with two children. The couple moved to London when the publishers relocated there (1889), and owned houses in Ayr, Cumbria and San Remo. Portraits of Janet were painted by Herdman and Llewellyn. Her funeral was held at Alloway Kirk, Ayr, where both she and her husband are buried. Janet Tait Black’s will of 8 December 1917 reflected her family’s commitment to public education, health and betterment. Her estate, mostly in the form of shares in J&P Coats, was valued at £314,150 (Scotsman 1919). The sum of £11,000 was left in trust as a memorial to her late husband, himself a book lover, who had played an important role in the 9th edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica. The bequest was to endow two prizes for ‘(first) the best biography’ or similar literary work each year, and ‘(second) the best novel’. The prizes, then known as ‘The J. Tait Black Memorial Book Prizes’ have been awarded by Edinburgh University’s Regius Professor of English since 1920, and are Britain’s oldest prizes for literary achievement. Administration of the funds passed to the University in 1936. Other bequests included £20,000 for a charitable fund named for Janet Tait Black’s mother; £10,000 as an endowment fund for the Thomas Coats Memorial Church, Paisley; and one to the

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Northern Lighthouse Keepers to finance the libraries established by her late brother James. LMCB • J.C.B. [Janet Coats Black] (1899, private) Rhymes and Verses. NRS: Ayrshire Sheriff Court, SC6/44/83 and SC6/46/46: Janet Coats Black, will and inventory. Coats, B. (2013, private) Seams Sewn Long Ago: the story of Coats the threadmakers; Kininmonth, K. (2016) ‘Weber’s protestant work ethic: a case study of Scottish entrepreneurs, the Coats family of Paisley’, Business History, 58:8, 1236–61; The Scotsman, 29 March 1919; The Times, 20 Nov. 1911 (obit. James Tait Black); The James Tait Black Prizes website: www. ed.ac.uk/events/james-tait-black TANEU (also Thenew)

born Lothian, fl. (traditionally) 5th century. Daughter (traditionally) of Leudonus, King of Lothian. According to two 12th-century Lives of St Kentigern, his mother Taneu was the daughter of a ‘semi-pagan’ king of Lothian. The confused chronology and dubious historicity of the different elements of these Lives stem no doubt from their relative lateness and disconnection from the period they purport to describe. Whether or not there was ever an historical Taneu is matter for speculation. Taneu was condemned to death by her father for becoming pregnant out of wedlock, but having been saved by divine intervention, she was set adrift in the Forth, and landed at Culross where she gave birth to Kentigern. It seems that the Lives’ authors were presented with (and appalled by) an older tradition in which Taneu conceived Kentigern while remaining a virgin. Her name is commemorated (in corrupted form) by St Enoch’s Cross in Glasgow. jef • Forbes, A. P. (ed.) (1874) Lives of S. Ninian and S. Kentigern; Jackson, K. H. (1958) ‘The sources for the life of St Kentigern’, in N. K. Chadwick (ed.) Studies in the Early British Church. TANNER, Ann Ailsa Louise, n. Robertson, born Kilmarnock 23 June 1923, died Helensburgh 19 Nov. 2001. Artist and researcher. Daughter of Eleanor Allen Moore, artist, and Robert Cecil Robertson, doctor. In 1925, Ailsa Robertson’s family moved from Scotland to Shanghai. Their privileged lifestyle and servants enabled her mother Eleanor Allen Moore (1885–1955), an accomplished artist who had studied at Glasgow School of Art, to concentrate on recording the landscape and daily life around her. In August 1937, British women and children were evacuated to Hong Kong, and Ailsa Robertson was sent to complete her schooling in Edinburgh. From 1942 to 1945 she worked for the

Women’s Land Army in Tighnabruach. After study at the University of Edinburgh and College of Art (MA and Diploma 1950) she became Assistant Curator of Prints and Drawings at Kelvingrove Museum and Art Galleries, Glasgow, where she met her future husband, Philip H. Tanner. As was customary then for women public employees, she resigned on marriage in 1956. Ailsa Tanner was active in the artistic life of Helensburgh, where the family lived with their three children. She continued to paint, exhibiting with the Helensburgh Art Club, GSLA, RGI(FA) and the RSW. Through her pioneering research into Scottish women artists, she became very knowledgeable about them, arranging exhibitions and contributing substantially to research on the *Glasgow Girls, of whom her mother had been one. la • Tanner, A. (1982) A Centenary Exhibition to Celebrate the Founding of the Glasgow Society of Lady Artists, (1994) ‘Women’s Forum cont.’, Chapman, 77, (1998) Bessie MacNicol, New Woman. Burkhauser, J. (ed.) (1990) Glasgow Girls: women in art and design 1880–1920; Paling, B. (2002) Ailsa Tanner 1923–2001, exhibition catalogue. TAYLER, Helen Agnes Henrietta (Hetty), born London 24 March 1869, died London 10 April 1951. Jacobite scholar and First World War nurse. Daughter of Georgina Lucy Duff, charitable patron, and William James Tayler, laird and commissioner to the Fife estates. Henrietta Tayler was a prolific Scottish historian who worked in partnership with her brother, Alistair Norwich Tayler (1870–1937). Although she spent most of her life in London’s Kensington, she always considered herself to be a Scot, with a special affection for her father’s native Banffshire. Through both parents, the siblings belonged to the Duff family, whose principal seat was Duff House in Banff. Their first full-length work was The Book of the Duffs (1914), a lively and comprehensive family history. Henrietta Tayler served with the Red Cross throughout the First World War, in Belgium, France and Italy. She cared for refugee children, displaced and sick civilians and wounded soldiers on both sides of the conflict. A compassionate and competent nurse, she was a gifted linguist, always willing to learn another language to help her care for her patients. The Taylers delighted in unearthing previously bypassed original documents. Their meticulous transcription, informative and sometimes acerbic commentary (evidence points to Hetty

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as the main author of the latter) continue to be esteemed by modern historians. Their most notable works include Jacobites of Aberdeenshire and Banffshire in the Forty-Five (1928) and 1745 and After (1938). Henrietta Tayler researched, wrote, published and continued to enjoy the company of her many friends and relatives until her death, aged 82. She is buried in Brompton Cemetery, London. MEC • Tayler, H., Works as above and (1920) A Scottish Nurse at Work. Craig, M. (2016) Henrietta Tayler: Scottish Jacobite historian and First World War nurse (Bibl.). TAYLOUR (or TAYLOR), Jane Elizabeth, born Inch, Stranraer, baptised 23 June 1827, died Saffron Walden, Essex, 25 Feb. 1905. Suffrage and women’s movement campaigner. Daughter of Maria Angus and Nathaniel Taylor. From December 1869, Jane Taylour toured north-east England and throughout Scotland, giving public lectures campaigning for women’s suffrage and equality of opportunity for women in education and employment. She was accompanied on some of her lecture tours in Scotland by *Mary Hill Burton or *Agnes McLaren. In July 1873, when she had delivered more than 150 public lectures in Scotland, she was presented with a substantial testimonial. She was the first Honorary Secretary of the Galloway branch of the NSWS (1870–2), joint Secretary of ENSWS (1873–6, with Agnes McLaren), an executive member of the central ­committee of NSWS (1875), signed its Declaration in 1889, and was still on the general committee in 1901. In 1871 she was appointed an agent for the Scottish Commercial Fire and Life Insurance Company. She left her home in Belmont in about 1872, staying in Edinburgh until at least 1875. In 1891, she settled in Saffron Walden, Essex, where, in 1895, she was Secretary of the local branch of the BWTA and was influential in obtaining the appointment of women to the local Board of Guardians. In 1901, she was recorded as living with Rachel P. Robson of Saffron Walden. She was interred in the Society of Friends’ burial ground. lrm

• AGC; Aberdeen Journal, 17 May 1871; Argyllshire Herald, 18 Feb. 1871; Galloway Advertiser and Wigtownshire Free Press, 16 Dec. 1869, 2 Feb. 1871, 22 June 1871. Blackburn, H. (1902) Women’s Suffrage: a record of the women’s suffrage movement in the British Isles; NUWSS (1899) Report of the Executive Committee presented at the AGM held in

Westminster Town Hall, 21 July; Saffron Walden Weekly News, 5 March 1905 (obit.); WSM. TEISSIER DU CROS, Janet, n. Grierson, born Aberdeen 26 Jan. 1905, died Ganges, France, 14 Oct. 1990. Writer, broadcaster, concert pianist. Daughter of Mary Letitia Ogston, and Sir Herbert J. C. Grierson, professor of literature. Janet Grierson, the youngest of five daughters, spent her early years in Aberdeen, where a childhood friend was *Janet Adam Smith. In 1915, the family moved to Edinburgh, where Janet attended St George’s School and developed a notable talent for music. Her piano tutor was composer Sir Donald Tovey, who encouraged her to continue her studies in Vienna in 1923. She also studied theory of music at the University of Edinburgh. She married François Teissier du Cros (1905–2006), a civil engineer (later a research physicist), on 9 December 1930, and settled in France. In 1939 her husband enlisted and she, with two young sons, moved in with his parents at Mandiargues in the Cévennes, but political differences within the family soon made this untenable. She spent the rest of the war alone with her children – a third son was born in 1942 – in a remote village, visited only occasionally by her husband, who was taken prisoner early in the war and released on parole. Her memoir Divided Loyalties (1962) describes the difficulties and privations of her life in occupied France. After the war the family settled in Paris, where a daughter was born in 1946 and where Janet worked as a translator. She contributed a regular ‘Paris Letter’ to BBC radio Woman’s Hour and the Glasgow Herald from the 1950s. In the early 1960s, she became a Catholic, partly because of the Church’s regard for art and music. When her husband retired in 1972, the couple moved to the family house at Mandiargues. She suffered from arthritis and osteoporosis from the late 1960s and eventually walked with crutches, but retained the ability to play the piano and to write. Her memoir of childhood and adolescence, Cross Currents, was posthumously published in 1997. marb

• Teissier du Cros, J. (1962) Divided Loyalties: a Scotswoman in occupied France (see also ‘Afterword’ by Janet Adam Smith in Canongate Classics edition, 1992), (1997) Cross Currents: a childhood in Scotland. TEMPLETON, Elizabeth Anne, n. McLaren, born

Glasgow 8 June 1945, died Pitlochry 11 April 2015. Freelance theologian and educationalist. Daughter

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of Elizabeth Ferguson, and Peter McLaren, ­teachers. Elizabeth McLaren attended Hutcheson’s Grammar School and graduated in Philosophy and English Literature from Glasgow University as a top student. Raised in the Christian faith, the logical positivism she learnt seemed to exclude all grounds for belief in God. Testing this, she took theology at the University of Edinburgh, coming to believe that faith is a matter of relationship and community which gives freedom to live with fundamental questions. From 1970 as Lecturer in the Philosophy of Religion she had a significant impact on a generation of students. She married New Testament lecturer Douglas Templeton in 1977 and left her post in 1980 to bring up their three children. From then on, she operated as a ‘freelance theologian’ and was widely regarded as writer, lecturer, worship leader, facilitator and educator in diverse contexts, including the Lambeth Conference, Scottish Churches House, the World Council of Churches, the Religious Education Movement, and broadcasting. She wanted theology to break free from academic confines and become integrated into people’s everyday lives. This inspired Threshold – an Edinburgh walk-in centre – and work based on Paulo Freire’s approach to adult and community learning. In 2006, the Templetons’ son Alan disappeared; they lived with uncertainty until his body was found in 2012. Retiring to Perthshire, she preached regularly and was much loved in her local church. In 2016 the main lecture room in New College, Edinburgh, was named after her. LO • Personal papers. Hulbert, A. (ed.) (2018) In Your Loving is Your Knowing: Elizabeth Templeton –prophet of our times (Bibl. and writings); The Scotsman, 28 May 2015 (obit.). Private information. TENNANT, Hon. Emma Christina, m1 Yorke, m2 Booker, m3 Cockburn, m4 Owens, born London

20 Oct. 1937, died London 20 Jan. 2017. Novelist, magazine editor. Daughter of Elizabeth Powell, and Christopher Grey Tennant, Second Baron Glenconner. Emma Tennant grew up in London and the family home, Glen, a ‘freezing and completely empty’ ‘faux-gothic’ baronial mansion in the Borders (Guardian, 2017). Though rarely listed as a ‘Scottish writer’, she drew inspiration from this childhood, seeing herself as doubly Scottish and English. In 1963 she published her first novel, The

Colour of Rain, under the pseudonym Catherine Aydy. It was submitted for the Prix Formentor, but denounced by one judge, Alberto Moravia, as an example of the ‘decadence of the contemporary British novel’. The experience so troubled Tennant that she didn’t publish for ten years. Her first marriage (to Sebastian Yorke, son of writer Henry Green) having ended, leaving her with a son, Matthew, she married journalist Christopher Booker (1963–68), then Alexander Cockburn (1968–73), with whom she had a daughter, Daisy. As this marriage too ended, she published under her own name her second novel, The Time of the Crack (1973), which launched her literary career. Although she also started the literary magazine Bananas, in 1975, the novels dominated, sometimes only a year between each. Influenced by second-wave feminism, throughout the 1970s Emma Tennant produced dark, female-led, fantastical takes on old masters, like The Bad Sister (1980). The 1980s saw some of her best work: Alice Fell, Queen of Stones (both 1980), Woman Beware Woman (1985), Black Marina (1985) and Two Women of London: The Strange Case of Mrs Jekyll and Ms Hyde (1989). Her love of revising canonical texts continued into the 1990s, when she became famous for literary sequels to Austen and Hardy: Pemberley and Tess (1993).She had another daughter, Rose, with the publisher Michael Dempsey. Her subsequent partner, Tim Owens, was with her until her death, by which time she had published thirty books over a fifty-year period. Her non-fiction included memoirs, Girlitude (1998) and Strangers, as well as Burnt Diaries (1999), a controversial recollection of her affair with Ted Hughes, published after his death. A challenging and prolific writer, Emma Tennant was overlooked for major prizes, perhaps two reasons why she is not better known. LM c D • Tennant, E. C., Works as above, and other titles. The Guardian, 21 Jan. 2017, The Herald, 2 Feb. 2017, New York Times, 29 Jan. 2017 (obits); The Peerage (www.thepeerage.com); The Scotsman, 31 July 2008 (interview). TEY, Josephine

(1896–1952) THENEW

see MACKINTOSH, Elizabeth

see TANEU (fl. 5th century)

THOMSON, Elizabeth, born Glasgow, 14 Sept. 1847, died Edinburgh, 12 Mar. 1918. Suffragette, teacher, missionary. Daughter of Margaret Thomson, and Robert Thomson, medical officer of health.

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Elizabeth Thomson, maternal grand-daughter of University of Glasgow Regius Professor of Chemistry Thomas Thomson, moved to London in 1852 following her grandfather’s death. She travelled throughout the 1890s and 1900s, working as a teacher and promoting the temperance movement, whose pledge she took in 1882. She visited India, Japan, the USA, Germany and Italy, amongst many more countries. On returning to the UK in June 1909, Elizabeth Thomson saw Emmeline Pankhurst speak at the Synod Hall, Edinburgh, and subsequently joined the WSPU. On 19 May 1913, aged 65, she went on trial in Jedburgh for her part in the attempted arson at Kelso racecourse on 5 April that year, alongside her sister Agnes, Arabella Scott and Edith Hudson. Elizabeth Thomson was sentenced to three months in Calton Jail but took part in a hunger strike which led to her early release under the Cat and Mouse Act. On 31 May, against court orders, she fled Edinburgh for Germany, and was never recaptured by the police. Her unpublished memoir details an independent life of adventure and activism. GE • Glasgow University Archive Services, GB 248 UGC 053, The Life Story of Miss Elizabeth Thomson, 1847–1918; NRS, HH16/44, Criminal case file: Arabella Charlotte Scott, Edith Hudson, Elizabeth Thomson, Agnes Colquhoun Thomson (Suffragettes) 1913–14. THOMSON, Emily Charlotte, born in India c. 1864, died Dundee 21 August 1955. Medical practitioner. Daughter of Emily Plumb Ogilvie, and Alexander Thompson, schools inspector. Together with Alice Margaret Moorhead (1868–1910), Emily Thomson was among the first women in Scotland to gain admission to the maledominated professional medical societies. Educated in Edinburgh, Rouen and Dublin, in 1891 Emily Thomson obtained the Triple Qualification of the three Scottish Licensing authorities, the RCPE, RCSE and the FPSG. She also obtained the Dublin Licentiate in Medicine in 1892. Her contemporary and GP partner, Alice Moorhead, sister of the suffragette *Ethel Moorhead, had similar qualifications, although Emily Thomson additionally qualified MBChM in Edinburgh in 1899. After short appointments elsewhere, the two women became the first female GPs in Dundee, initially in the Nethergate and, by 1901, in Tay Square. Alice Moorhead worked mainly with poorer patients while Emily Thomson worked with the better-off and was involved in the founding of Dundee Women’s Hospital, in 1896, with

*Mary Lily Walker. In 1893, they successfully applied for membership of the Forfarshire Medical Association, and eventually both were members of the BMA. *Elizabeth Bryson remembered moving, as an overawed locum, into their big house with housemaid, cook and chauffeur. ‘Dr Emily’, described by Bryson as ‘vivid, dark, business-like, capable’ (Bryson 1966, p. 213) was one of Dundee’s first woman car drivers. ‘Dr Alice’, who was ‘fair, blue-eyed, soft spoken, with a touch of Irish gaiety’ (ibid.), served on the parish council (1908). At the age of 41 she married Dr Hamilton Langwill and moved to Leith. She died in childbirth the following year. Emily Thomson retired to Arbroath. Her life is the subject of a novel by Eileen Ramsay, Butterflies in December (1995). jlmj • Univ. of Dundee Archives: Forfarshire Medical Association Annual Report, 29 June 1893; Margaret Menzies Campbell papers (MS 15/92). Bryson E. (1966) Look Back in Wonder ; Dundee Courier & Advertiser, 22 August 1955 (Thomson, obit.); DWT; Jenkinson, J. (1993) Scottish Medical Societies 1731–1939; Medical Directory (1908); Medical Register (1955). Additional information: Mary Henderson. THOMSON, Helen Mitchell, m. Moon, born Dundee 8 Feb. 1883, died Dundee 2 Nov. 1973. Prison wardress, Calton Jail, Edinburgh. Daughter of Mary Thomson, power loom weaver, and John Thomson, cloth lapper. Helen Thomson was one of two sisters and grew up in the Upper Hilltown area of Dundee. After she left school she worked in the Overgate Mission where the minister saw her aptitude for social work and urged her to become a prison wardress. Keen to move away from Dundee, she started work at Calton Jail, Edinburgh, just before the First World War. She joined a team of women, many of whom were Gaelic speakers from the Highlands and Hebrides. The female prisoners at the time included suffragettes, and the humiliating experience of force-feeding was described to her by another wardress. Other inmates included prostitutes and political prisoners such as James Maxton, John McLean and Willie Gallacher. Helen Thomson helped run the prison bible class, which was well attended as it offered the prisoners the opportunity to leave their cells. During her time in Edinburgh, she also played the organ for the Carruber’s Close Mission. In 1921, she returned to Dundee where, on 21 August, she married John Moon, a railway goods checker. They had two daughters. Necessity forced her out to work in the

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jute mills where one of her jobs was making sandbags. She was an active member of the Woman’s Guild at the local church and was involved in running an ‘old folks’ club. hec • Interview with Mary Moon, daughter of Helen Thomson.

n. Hunter, MBE, born Edinburgh 20 August 1902, died Huntly 16 June 1982. Doctor, war heroine. Daughter of Margaret Robertson, and George Alexander Hunter, solicitor and banker. The third of six children, Margaret Hunter was educated at Edinburgh Ladies’ College (later the Mary Erskine School) and the University of Edinburgh, where she qualified MBChB (1926), as did her younger sister. After general practice in Lanarkshire, she married rubber planter and agricultural researcher Daniel Stewart Thomson (1899/1900–1971). When war broke out, they were at the Experimental Rubber Station near Kuala Lumpur. Margaret Thomson was attached to the Malaya Medical Services, organising first-aid classes. After the fall of Singapore in February 1942, she left on the last allied ship, the SS Kuala, tending the injured. The ship was dive-bombed, and she spent hours in the sea before being picked up. Although suffering from a thigh wound, she helped row for hours in a swamped lifeboat. On first Kebat, then Senajang Island, she took charge of the wounded and performed emergency operations, using driftwood to make splints and cleaning wounds in the sea. She helped evacuate the injured to hospital on Sinkep Island. Her own wound turned septic and she was stretchered to Sinkep, but made the sea voyage to Sumatra, then began the long overland trek with other women survivors before the advancing Japanese. She was captured and imprisoned for the rest of the war, first in Djambi jail and later in a Sumatran jungle POW camp. Another Scotswoman in the Irenelaan camp, musically trained Norah Chambers, n. Hope (1905–89), created a choir, which sang orchestral works arranged by herself and Sunderland-born missionary Margaret Dryburgh (d. 1945), to keep up morale. Death depleted the choir’s ranks and Margaret Thomson saw her patients die, as Red Cross medical supplies were hoarded by camp guards. She was awarded the MBE ‘for her resolution and disregard of self, her sacrifice and admirable courage’ (London Gazette, August 1943). After the war, Margaret Thomson and her husband, an emaciated survivor of the Burmah Railway, returned to the rubber station in Kuala Lumpur,

THOMSON, Margaret Henderson,

where she ran a health clinic for estate workers. They left Malaya permanently c. 1950, and spent the rest of their lives as innovative farmers near Huntly, Aberdeenshire. Although later consulted for the BBC drama, Tenko, Margaret Thomson did not watch it or like talking about the camp to outsiders. so • Stanford Univ.: MSS of vocal arrangements. Brooke, G. (1989) Singapore’s Dunkirk; Daily Herald, 3 July 1943; Hall, C. (1989) ‘Music gave them the will to survive’, Music Maker, Sept.–Oct., pp. 24–7; *ODNB (2004); Smyth, J., Brig. (1970) The Will to Live ; Warner, L. and Sandilands, J. (1982) Women beyond the Wire. Additional information: John Purser. TOD, Isabella Maria Susan, born Edinburgh 18 May 1836, died Belfast 8 Dec. 1896. Campaigner for women’s rights. Daughter of Maria Isabella Waddell of Co. Monaghan, and James Banks Tod, Scottish merchant. Isabella Tod, of Presbyterian background, was educated at home by her mother, who had a profound influence on her. By the 1860s, she and her mother were living in Belfast, where Isabella Tod appears, for a time, to have earned a living writing leaders for the Belfast newspaper the Northern Whig. Her first foray into public life came in 1867 when her paper on the education of girls was read at a meeting of the National Association for the Promotion of Social Science. She then became active in a committee to support changes in the married women’s property laws. In 1867, she helped establish the Ladies’ Institute in Belfast which initially provided lectures to young women in arts subjects, but also campaigned successfully to have women take examinations drawn up by the Queen’s University, Belfast. She was a leading figure in promoting the secondary education of girls and was instrumental in having girls included in the Intermediate Education (Ireland) Act of 1878. In 1871, she organised the first suffrage society in Ireland, the North of Ireland Women’s Suffrage Committee. She campaigned on the issue of suffrage throughout Britain and her speeches were widely reported in the daily newspapers. At local level, her campaigning won women in Belfast the municipal franchise in 1887. Isabella Tod was also active in the temperance movement and acted as vice-president of the British Women’s Temperance Union from 1877 to 1892. She was a significant force in the split that occurred in the BWTU, which led to the formation of the Women’s Total

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Abstinence Union, of which she was vice-president until 1896. In 1886, Isabella Tod threw herself into the campaign against Home Rule for Ireland, believing it would destroy the country and fatally damage the relationship between Ireland and the rest of the United Kingdom. The resulting crusade not only lost her a number of suffrage friends but also seriously damaged her health. ml • Victoria College, Belfast: MS Ladies’ Institute Minute Book, 1867–97; LSE Archives: K. Courtney, diary/letter to M. Courtney, 3 Sept.–19 Oct. 1890, vol. xxv, Courtney Papers, BLPES. Armour, N. (2004) ‘Isabella Tod and Liberal Unionism’, in A. Hayes and D. Urquhart, Irish Women’s History; Bourke A. et al. (eds) (2002) The Field Day Anthology of Irish Writing, vol. 5 (Bibl.); Brown, H. (1998) ‘An alternative imperialism: Isabella Tod, internationalist and “good Liberal Unionist”’, Gender and History, 10:3; Englishwoman’s Review, 15 Jan. 1897; Luddy, M. (1995) ‘Isabella M. S. Tod (1836–96)’, in M. Cullen and M. Luddy (eds) Women, Power and Consciousness in 19th-Century Ireland; *ODNB (2004); Wings, July 1893 pp. 217–19; The Witness, 11 Dec. 1896; Women’s Penny Paper, 12 Oct. 1889. TOLLEMACHE, Elizabeth, Duchess of Argyll, born July 1659, died Campbeltown 9 May 1735. Estate manager, philanthropist. Daughter of *Elizabeth Murray, Countess of Dysart, later Duchess of Lauderdale, and Sir Lionel Tollemache. The eldest surviving daughter from her mother’s first marriage, Elizabeth Tollemache spent her youth at Ham House, London, and family homes in Suffolk. In 1678, she was married to Archibald Campbell, Lord Lorne, eldest son of the 9th Earl of Argyll, and stepson of *Anna MacKenzie, in a match intended to strengthen relations between her parents and Argyll. Her generous marriage ­settlement of most of his estates of Kintyre in jointure was probably due to her parents’ ­influence with Charles II. Lorne recovered the forfeited title of Earl of Argyll in 1689, after the accession of William and Mary, and was created 1st Duke of Argyll in 1701, two years before his death. Two sons became Dukes of Argyll and a daughter married the Earl of Bute. Another daughter, *Lady Charlotte Bury, became a novelist and diarist. The marriage was not happy and the couple separated in 1696. Duchess Elizabeth moved to Campbeltown where, from her residence, ‘Limecraigs’, she managed her Kintyre estates. Her business acumen is evident from the many ­references to her in the Minutes of Campbeltown

Town Council. She was the first to recognise the town’s potential as a seaport, suggesting the building of quays and harbour and subsequently subsidising the first packet service between Campbeltown and Glasgow. She helped build the ‘Lowland Church’ that still stands today. Her residence, the ‘Duchess Well’ near the gate of the manse, and a large silver communion vessel gifted by her to the church, are surviving testimony to her strong bond with Campbeltown. m v h • Cripps, D. (1975) Elizabeth of the Sealed Knot. A biography of Elizabeth Murray Countess of Dysart ; Mactaggart, Col. C. (1986) ‘The Limecraigs Duchess’, Kintyre Antiq. and Nat. Hist. Soc. 15; ODNB (2004) (Campbell, Archibald, 1st Duke of Argyll). TOLMIE, Frances, born Uignish Farm, Duirinish, Isle of Skye, 13 Oct. 1840, died Dunvegan, Isle of Skye, 31 Dec. 1926. Folklorist and song collector. Daughter of Margaret Hope MacAskill, and John Tolmie, tacksman. The Tolmies of Uignish were a distinguished Skye family, but Frances’s father died in 1844, and it was from her mother’s people, the MacAskills, at Talisker and later Rubha an Dùnan, that she first acquired Gaelic songs. In her early 20s she began actively collecting from women who escorted her in her work as a distributor of wool. She had excellent Gaelic and a sound knowledge of Irish Gaelic, as well as some Manx and Welsh, and was encouraged by Alexander Carmichael of Carmina Gadelica fame, who was a family friend (see Carmichael, Ella). After periods as a governess in Edinburgh and with her brother’s family in Nairn, she moved to Cambridge, studying briefly at Newnham, where she was described as a ‘tall, rather gaunt’ figure with red hair that reached the ground when she was seated (Bassin 1977, p. 63). There followed 20 years (1874–95) in the Lake District as companion to Harriet Rigbye, on whose death Frances Tolmie became heir and executrix with a comfortable inheritance. She then joined her sister in Oban, and later Edinburgh, returning to Skye only after the latter’s death. The fruits of her labours were published in 1911 in the Journal of the Folk-Song Society, with the encouragement of *Lucy Broadwood. With the original Gaelic and the substantial annotations, these form one of the single most important and reliable sources of Gaelic song. She notated the tunes and words as she had heard them, and her more correct versions compare favourably with those of *Marjory Kennedy-Fraser. jp

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making items, books from her schooldays, postcards and letters including copies of her own letters to friends. Together, they build up a picture of her life. Of particular interest is her correspondence, kept up during both world wars, with a former colleague, Mr Collins, which provides a fascinating insight into office life in the first half of the 20th century. lrh

• Tolmie, F. (1911) ‘One hundred and five songs of occupation from the Western Isles of Scotland’, Jour. of the FolkSong Society, 16, 3rd part of vol. IV., pp. iv–xiv, 143–276 (reprinted as volume, Llanerch 1997); recordings of Tolmie’s singing, made by Marjory Kennedy-Fraser, SSS, Univ. of Edinburgh. Bassin, E. (1948) ‘Frances Tolmie’, Jour. Eng. Folk Dance and Song Soc., vol. V, no. 3, pp. 141–4, (1951) ‘The Tolmie Manuscripts’, ibid., vol. VI, no. 3, pp. 61–8, (1977) The Old Songs of Skye – Frances Tolmie and her Circle ; Broadwood, L. E. (1927) ‘Frances Tolmie’, Folk Song Journal, p. 50 (obit.); ODNB (2004).

• Hepburn, L. (2003) The Tenement House ; Ritchie, W. K. (1997) Miss Toward of The Tenement House.

died probably in Lorne 695. Queen of Cenel Loairn. Nothing is known of Tomnat aside from the year of her death, although this is of itself quite remarkable given an almost complete lack of reference to royal women of the Dál Riata in the early sources. She was the wife of Ferchar, evidently Ferchar Fota, king of Cenél Loairn in Lorne, who was latterly over-king of Argyll. She may have been a princess from Cenél nGabráin, the powerful Kintyre lineage whose members attracted more attention in the sources than any other family in Dál Riata. It is uncertain whether Tomnat was the mother of either of Ferchar’s sons, Ainfchellach and Selbach, who dominated Argyll politics in the subsequent generation. jef

TOMNAT,

• MacAirt, S. and MacNiocaill, G. (eds) (1983) The Annals of Ulster (to ad 1131), AU 695. TOWARD, Agnes Reid, born Glasgow 19 Sept. 1886, died Glasgow 1975. Shorthand typist, tenement dweller. Daughter of Agnes Reid, dressmaker, and William Toward, metal merchant. Agnes Toward spent most of her life in the Garnethill area of Glasgow. She attended Garnethill Public School, then studied shorthand and typing at the Glasgow Athenaeum Commercial College in Buchanan Street (1905–6). In 1914, she joined a shipping company, Prentice, Service & Henderson, as a shorthand typist and remained with them till she retired in 1960, aged 74. From 1911 until 1965, Miss Toward lived in a tenement flat at 145 Buccleuch Street in Glasgow. When she died in 1975, her flat was bought by Anna Davidson who sold it seven years later to the NTS. The flat is now preserved as a typical example of the type of tenement flat many Scottish people lived in during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Miss Toward had kept many items which other people would have thrown away, such as household bills, recipes, dress-

TOWSER, born 21 April 1963, died Crieff 20 March 1987. Distillery employee and professional hunter. Towser lost her parents shortly after birth, but found employment and a surrogate family at the Glenturret Distillery in Crieff. Friendly and outgoing, she was widely recognised by the public from distillery tours and her television work: an international fan-base sent her gifts of caviar and smoked salmon. A formidable hunter and pest-control expert, she notched up an estimated total of 28,899 kills in her twenty-four-year career, entering The Guinness Book of Records. Rumours that the regular addition of a nip of whisky to her meals helped fuel her remarkable ability were never scientifically proven. Her successor, Amber, failed to live up to her feisty predecessor’s reputation, bagging one catch in 2001 which subsequently escaped. Glenturret Distillery erected a statue of its most famous employee in 1997. Her true identity was sometimes obscured by reporters assuming that such an efficient hunter must have been male, but in 2005 The Herald paid due tribute to the tireless devotion of this most exemplary female distillery worker. In 2017 a Glenturret distillery bottling was named in Towser’s honour.

• (1988) The Guinness Book of Records, p. 31; Small, M. (c. 1985) The Glenturret Cat (sound cassette, Whigmaleerie); ‘Which cat can fill this puss’s boots?’ The Herald, 31 May 2005.

born Panbride, Forfarshire, 16 Feb. 1798, died Edinburgh 3 Dec. 1872. Artist, pioneering nun and educator. Daughter of Catherine Biss, and the Rev. David Trail. Ann Trail’s father’s family had ministered at Panbride for three generations, the longest held charge in a single family in the Church of Scotland. The second of 11 children, she was educated at home. She taught at an Irish charity school for two years, also doing charity visiting. After training as an artist and receiving commissions in London, in 1826 she left to travel extensively in Italy, including TRAIL, Ann Agnes (Agnes Xavier),

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some time spent with the artist David Wilkie. After rejecting several suitors, she became a Catholic in June 1828. Returning home in 1829 she was influenced by prominent Cambridge movement converts, and with a fellow Scotswoman, Margaret Clapperton, entered the Ursuline novitiate in Cavagnes, France, in 1833. She took the name Agnes Xavier. In 1834 she, seven French nuns and two lay sisters founded the first post-Reformation convent in Scotland at St Margaret’s, Greenhill, Edinburgh, In 1842, her convent held the first Quarant’Ore and the first modern Corpus Christi procession in Scotland, long before they were introduced into England. Her wide-ranging interests and connections drew her into the full vigour of the Catholic revival. She taught, gave drawing classes and executed many fine miniatures, of which several remain in St Margaret’s. After a stroke late in life she gradually retired and died on the feast day of her patron, Francis Xavier. ba

involved in its management during both their tenures. DLS • ACA: Town Council Register, 63, 5 Sept. 1764. Scottish Book Trade Index: AJ, 15 Oct. 1764.

• Scottish Catholic Archives, Edinburgh; St Margaret’s Convent, Edinburgh; Sacra Congregazione di Propaganda Fide, Rome. Trail A. A. (1897) Conversion of Miss Trail, a Scotch Presbyterian, written by herself, (1886) The Revival of Conventual Life. Anon. (1897) History of St Margaret’s Convent, Edinburgh; *ODNB (2004). TRAIL, Susan (Susanna),‡ m. Chalmers, baptised

Montrose 28 April 1720, died Aberdeen 18 May 1791. Printer. Daughter of Christian Allardyce, and Rev. James Trail. In about 1740, Susan Trail married James Chalmers, Printer to the Town and Marischal College in Aberdeen, 1736–63. Although she bore eight children (and buried four), she worked in the printing business, including the new Aberdeen Journal, begun in 1746. When her husband died, she managed the business and newspaper for over a year, in the absence of her eldest son James. She petitioned the Council on 5 Sept. 1764 for herself and James to continue as printers to the town, a request which was unanimously granted, ‘the longest liver of them to be Town’s Printers’ (Register), in a vote of confidence in her abilities. In Oct., James advertised that he intended to continue printing ‘in Conjunction with his Mother’ (Scottish Book Trade Index) and that they were candidates for the position of Printers to the County. Although Susan Trail’s husband and son were the public faces of the business, she was clearly

TRAQUAIR, Phoebe Anna, n. Moss, born Dublin 24 May 1852, died Edinburgh 4 August 1936. Artist, mural decorator and craftworker. Daughter of Teresa Richardson, and William Moss, surgeon. One of seven children, Phoebe Anna Moss studied between 1869 and 1872 at the School of Design run by the RDS, which assigned her to illustrate the research papers of Dr Ramsay Heatley Traquair (1840–1912), a Scots palaeontologist. They married on 5 June 1873, moving in 1874 to Edinburgh, where Ramsay was appointed Keeper of Natural History at the MSA. Determined to be a professional artist-craftsperson, Phoebe Traquair had turned from small-scale embroidered work to large stitched figurative panels by 1886. Despite, or because of, a demanding home life with three children, she began to create public art, decorating the tiny new chapel of the Royal Edinburgh Hospital for Sick Children, a commission arranged through the philanthropic ESU. In 1892, the Union negotiated her commission for the Catholic Apostolic Church for their Mansfield Place church (today the Mansfield Traquair Centre). Meantime, she painted the Song School, a choir practice room of St Mary’s Episcopal Cathedral (1888–92). In all these, she wished to unite the arts and spiritually benefit her community. She also decorated two English buildings, the church of St Peter in Clayworth, Nottinghamshire (1904–5) and the Manners Chapel at Thorneyhill, Hampshire (1920–2), in her late Pre-Raphaelite style. From the late 1880s, Phoebe Anna Traquair worked in both commercial book art and private manuscript illumination. John Ruskin lent her medieval manuscripts to copy in 1887. Her principal publisher was T. & A. Constable for whose ­proprietor, Walter B. Blaikie, she later designed garden gates and railings. Her 1890s manuscripts illuminated the poetry of Rossetti, Tennyson and the Brownings. After 1900, she turned to the fashionable field of enamelwork set as jewellery or ornaments. With her friend *Annie Macdonald she was a member of the GWB, which met in the Dean Studio, where she also rented a studio from 1890 until the Traquairs moved to Colinton in 1906. A member of the SGH and the ACES, London, from the 1890s, she also showed work at the RSA (which eventually elected her an honorary

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member in 1920) and in charity and professional exhibitions across Scotland. On the advice of designer Walter Crane, she showed a tooled bookcover at the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair (Cumming 1993, p. 31). Her embroideries The Progress of a Soul (NGS, 1893–1902: Cumming 1993, pp. 65–6) were exhibited at the World’s Fair at St Louis in 1904. Her architect friend Robert Lorimer commissioned enamelled stallplates for the Thistle Chapel, Edinburgh, a piano decoration for Frank Tennant (both worked in 1909–10) and three post-war memorial altarpieces for Glasgow churches. Her elder son, Ramsay, articled to Lorimer, designed some of her enamelled ornament settings, later becoming an authority on Canadian silver. In recent years, Phoebe Anna Traquair has regained recognition as a multi-talented creator, one of the most important in her generation in Scotland. ec

‘most superb beauty’. Her relics were considered particularly efficacious for curing eye ailments. jef • MacDonald, A. A. (2000) ‘The Chapel of Restalrig: royal folly or venerable shrine?’, in L. A. J. R. Houwen et al. (eds) A Palace in the Wild.

of Mortonhall, born Midlothian c. 1740, died after 1828. Noted conversationalist. Menie Trotter left no writing, but accounts of her conversation survive. Henry Cockburn (1779–1854), Whig contemporary of Walter Scott, recalled in his memoirs ‘a singular race of excellent Scotch old ladies’ as they were in 1810. He particularly singled out Miss Menie Trotter, whose ‘understanding was fully as masculine’ as her attire. Cockburn gave one story to make his point.

TROTTER, Menie,

• NLS: Acc. 8122–29: Corr. and papers of Phoebe Anna Traquair. Armour, M. (1897) ‘Beautiful modern manuscripts’, The Studio: Special Winter Number, pp. 47–55, (1897) ‘Mural decoration in Scotland’, The Studio, pp. 100–6; Baldwin Brown, G. (1889) ‘Some recent efforts in mural decoration’, The Scottish Art Review, Jan., pp. 225–8; Callen, A. (1979) Angel in the Studio; Caw, J. L. (1900) ‘The art work of Mrs Traquair’, The Art Journal, pp. 143–8; Cumming, E. (1987) ‘Phoebe Anna Traquair HRSA (1852–1936) and her c­ ontribution to arts and crafts in Edinburgh’, PhD, Univ. of Edinburgh, (1993) Phoebe Anna Traquair 1852–1936, (2005) Phoebe Anna Traquair , (2006) Hand, Heart and Soul: the Arts and Crafts Movement in Scotland, (2007) ‘Life’s rich tapestry: Phoebe Anna Traquair’s The Progress of a Soul’, The Review of Scottish Culture, 19, pp. 63–76; *ODNB (2004).

fl. between the 6th and 8th centuries. Nun and probably abbess, southern Pictland. Little can be said with confidence about Triduana, patron saint of Restalrig near Edinburgh, where her relics were venerated. Her feast day was 8 October. The sixteenth-century Aberdeen Breviary makes her a Greek nun who came to Scotland with St. Regulus, the missionary credited with having brought Christianity and St Andrew’s relics to the kingdom. This story is not historical; more useful are Triduana’s associations with retreats at Rescobie near Forfar and Dunfallandy near Pitlochry in Atholl, which hint at a Pictish noblewoman who became a nun and abbess. Legend has it that Triduana was desired by a king called Nectan (a common Pictish name). To preserve her modesty she tore out her eyes and sent them to him, having learned that his passions had been aroused by their

TRIDUANA,

On one of her friends asking [Miss Trotter], not long before her death, how she was, she said, ‘Very weel – quite weel. But, eh, I had a dismal dream last night! a fearfu’ dream!’[. . .] Of a’places i’the world, I dreamed I was in heeven! And what d’ye think I saw there? Deil ha’et but thoosands upon thoosands, o’stark naked weans! That wad be a dreadfu’ thing! for ye ken I ne’er could bide bairns a’my days!’ (1974, p. 61)

Cockburn went on to say that ‘all these female Nestors’ were truly pious, but would hardly be deemed so in his own day, for ‘the very freedom and cheerfulness of their conversation and views’. *Anne Grant of Laggan described Miss Trotter in 1828 as ‘a stately form and firm, energetic and high-principled’, despite her great age, and serving food from her own farm ‘well-dressed and excellent’ (1844, III, pp. 144–6). Cockburn’s outspoken ladies included Sophia Johnston of Hilton, (c. 1730–c. 1810). Raised without forcible education, like Rousseau’s Emile, she taught herself carpentry and blacksmithing, preferred men’s clothing, learnt to read and write later in life, and discussed everything. Cockburn recalled ‘her talk intelligent and racy, rich in both old anecdote, and shrewd modern observation, and spiced with a good deal of plain sarcasm; her understanding powerful; all her opinions free, and very freely expressed . . .’ (1974, p. 55). ds • NLS: Acc. 11880, papers of Dr Neil Ker relating to research on the Trotter family. Cockburn, H. [1874] (1974) Memorials of His Time, K. Miller, ed.; Grant of Laggan, Mrs [Anne] (1844) Memoir and Correspondence of Mrs Grant of Laggan, 3 vols; Lindsay, Lady A., ‘Sophia (Suff ) Johnston of the Hilton Family’, in A. W. C. Lindsay, (1849) Lives of the Lindsays: a memoir of the house of

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TROUT Crawford and Balcarres; Symonds, D. A. (1997) Weep Not for Me: women, ballads, and infanticide in Early Modern Scotland. TROUT, Jennie (or Jenny) Kidd, n. Gowanlock, born Kelso, 21 April 1841, died Hollywood, USA 10 Nov. 1921. Canada’s first licensed woman physician. Daughter of Elizabeth Kidd, and Andrews Gowanlock. Jennie Gowanlock’s family emigrated to Stratford, Canada, in 1847. Accredited as a teacher in 1861, she taught until 1865 when she married Edward Trout, influential publisher of Toronto’s Monetary Times. He encouraged her to pursue medical studies, her decision prompted by prolonged bouts with ‘nervous ailments’. Jennie Trout pioneered Canadian women’s long struggle to enter the medical profession. Despite huge barriers, she and a colleague gained admission to the Toronto School of Medicine in 1871, conditional on launching no complaints. The male students’ and professors’ indecencies and pranks rendered this unworkable and she finished her degree at Pennsylvania’s Women’s Medical College, 1872–5. When the Canadian profession refused to acknowledge her foreign degree, she passed all their examinations (1875). Edward Trout’s media connections prominently publicised her as Canada’s first licensed woman physician. Inundated with requests from women seeking a female physician, she operated a private practice and free women’s dispensary, and founded the Therapeutic and Electric Institute for women’s health care. These demands strained her health and forced retirement in 1882. When women were expelled from studying medicine at Queen’s University for challenging male students’ discriminatory behaviour, Jennie Trout, continuing her activism for women’s equality, personally encouraged them, contributing $10,000 and scholarships to establish the Women’s Medical College of Kingston (1883–93), with women as trustees and professors. Little is known after her emigration to the USA, where she devoted her life to Bible study. A Canadian 40 cent stamp (1991 issue) commemorated her life. lj

• Dembski, P. E. P. (1985) ‘Jenny Kidd Trout and the founding of the Women’s Medical Colleges at Kingston and Toronto’, Ontario History, 77; Dictionary of Canadian Biography (Jenny Kidd Gowanlock) (Bibl.). TURNER, Annie Helen Nairn,‡

n. Monro, born Calcutta 16 Dec. 1901, died Edinburgh 21 Sept. 1977. Illustrator, glass engraver, designer, teacher.

Daughter of Annie Black Monro Nairn, and David Lunan Monro, newspaper editor. Helen Monro studied at George Watson’s Ladies College, followed by an Arts degree at the University of Edinburgh, and a Diploma in Design and Crafts at ECA. Having graduated in 1926, specialising in wood cuts, she illustrated books for Thomas Nelson & Sons, Edinburgh publishers. In the late 1920s she sketched workers and designed publicity material at Edinburgh and Leith Flint Glass Works. She also designed glass and exhibited pieces in the 1935 Art in Industry exhibition at the Royal Academy, London. In 1938 she received an ECA Andrew Grant Fellowship to study glass engraving, cutting and etching at the Kunstgewerbeschule in Stuttgart. Returning in 1939, she was asked to set up the Department of Glass Design at ECA, which opened in January 1941 with four students and two unreliable lathes. On 1 July 1943, she married glass specialist Prof. W. E. S. Turner (1861–1963), wearing a wedding dress made from blue glass fibre. From 1947 to 1970, Helen Monro Turner was head of an expanding glass department, many of her students becoming highly successful. She presented conference papers, wrote articles and in her Juniper Green workshop completed numerous and varied private commissions, ranging from large sand-blasted architectural glass to small copperwheel engraved individual pieces. JT • Monro, H. (1960) ‘The art of glass engraving’, Journal of the Royal Society of Arts, vol. 108, June, pp. 477–95; (1960) ‘Glass engraving’, The Studio, Oct., pp. 122–9; Turner, H. Monro (1968) ‘The designer: some problems’, Studies in Glass History and Design, Papers read . . . to the VIIIth International Congress on Glass, London, pp. 116–18. Blench, B. (1988) ‘Profile: Helen Monro Turner’ in Craftwork no. 20, Summer, pp. 20–1; (1989) ‘Impassioned vision: Helen Turner and the teaching of glass design’, Journal of the Decorative Arts Society, 13, pp. 39–42; https://turnermuseum. group.shef.ac.uk TWEEDSMUIR, Priscilla, Lady

(1915–78)

see BUCHAN, Priscilla

born c. 1781, died 3 Sept. 1857. Writer. Daughter of Ann Fraser, and Alexander Fraser Tytler, writer and professor of universal history at the University of Edinburgh, later Lord Woodhouselee. In middle age Ann Fraser Tytler began to write stories for the children of her youngest brother,

TYTLER, Ann Fraser,

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Patrick Fraser Tytler, the historian (1791–1849). Her first and most successful novel, Leila; or The Island (1833), was in the fashionable genre of Robinsonnades: eight-year-old Leila Howard is shipwrecked along with her father, nurse and pet dog and cat on what proves to be an idyllic uninhabited island. This was followed by two stories about twins, Mary and Florence; or Grave and Gay (1835) and Mary and Florence at Sixteen (1838), and then by two Leila sequels, Leila in England (1842) and Leila at Home (1852). Popular on both sides of the Atlantic until at least the 1880s, these books are full of happiness, religious in spirit, and not particularly concerned with moral instruction. As

fiction they are characterised by a well-sustained narrative thrust and quite lively dialogue. At the end of her life Ann Fraser Tytler contributed with reminiscences to a biography of her brother Patrick. dgm • Tytler, A. F., Works as above. Avery, G. (1965) Nineteenth Century Children: Heroes and Heroines in English Children’s Stories 1780–1900; Burgon, J. W. (1859) The Portrait of a Christian Gentleman – a Memoir of Patrick Fraser Tytler, author of ‘The History of Scotland’ ; Horne, J. C. (2016) History and the Construction of the Child in Early British Children’s Literature. TYTLER, Sarah

see KEDDIE, Henrietta (1827–1914)

U URE, Joan

(1918–78)

see CLARK, Elizabeth Thomson (Betty)

born Kelvinside, Glasgow, 18 Feb. 1933, died London 3 April 1975. Actor. Daughter of Edith Swinburne, and Colin McGregor Ure, engineer. Educated in Glasgow and at the Mount School, York, Mary Ure was an actor of skill, range and beauty, frequently cast in vulnerable roles. She trained at the Central School of Speech and Drama in London, making her debut at the Manchester Opera House in 1953 in Alan Melville’s Simon and Laura. Her potential was swiftly recognised, and she made a dazzling West End debut at the London Arts Theatre in 1954 in Anouilh’s Time Remembered. In 1955 she played Ophelia to Paul Scofield’s Hamlet, appearing in this production in Moscow on stage and television. Her most memorable roles came at the Royal Court Theatre, London, in the spring of 1956 – Abigail in the first British production of The Crucible by Arthur Miller, and Alison in John Osborne’s Look Back in Anger. She also played Alison in the film version (opposite Richard Burton) and on the New York stage. Mary Ure married John Osborne (1929–94) in 1957; a tempestuous union, it ended in divorce five years later, when their son was one year old. By this time, she had fallen in love with Robert Shaw (1927–78), appearing with him in the Elizabethan comedy The Changeling at the Royal Court in 1961. They married in 1963 and had four children. URE, Mary,

Mary Ure played leading roles with the Royal Shakespeare Company at Stratford. Her films included Storm Over the Nile (1955), Sons and Lovers (for which she received an Academy Award Nomination in 1960), Custer of the West (1967) and Where Eagles Dare (1968). She claimed, however, that her preference was for the theatre and that she appeared in films to please her husbands. She returned to the stage in 1975, giving a powerful performance in Don Taylor’s The Exorcism at the Comedy Theatre, London. On the evening of the first night of this production, a cocktail of whisky and tranquillisers led to her untimely death. dc • Heilpern. J. (2006) John Osborne: a patriot for us; ODNB (2004); The Scotsman, 6 April 1975 (obit.). URQUHART, Margery, OBE, born Patagonia, Chile 27 Aug. 1912, died Aberdeen 9 May 2007. Daughter of Betsy MacDonald, and Alexander Urquhart, sheep and cattle farmers. Agriculture graduate, policewoman, special agent and social work pioneer. Margery Urquhart spent her first 11 years on a farm near Punta Arenas. In 1923, the family returned to farming in Milton of Culloden, Inverness. After three years at Inverness Royal Academy, she studied agriculture at the University of Aberdeen, ‘a negative decision . . . I knew I didn’t want to be a teacher’ (Focus 1975). On graduating, she worked on a Hampshire farm before joining the women’s police in 1936. One of only 50 women in the Metropolitan police, she was the first female

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Patrick Fraser Tytler, the historian (1791–1849). Her first and most successful novel, Leila; or The Island (1833), was in the fashionable genre of Robinsonnades: eight-year-old Leila Howard is shipwrecked along with her father, nurse and pet dog and cat on what proves to be an idyllic uninhabited island. This was followed by two stories about twins, Mary and Florence; or Grave and Gay (1835) and Mary and Florence at Sixteen (1838), and then by two Leila sequels, Leila in England (1842) and Leila at Home (1852). Popular on both sides of the Atlantic until at least the 1880s, these books are full of happiness, religious in spirit, and not particularly concerned with moral instruction. As

fiction they are characterised by a well-sustained narrative thrust and quite lively dialogue. At the end of her life Ann Fraser Tytler contributed with reminiscences to a biography of her brother Patrick. dgm • Tytler, A. F., Works as above. Avery, G. (1965) Nineteenth Century Children: Heroes and Heroines in English Children’s Stories 1780–1900; Burgon, J. W. (1859) The Portrait of a Christian Gentleman – a Memoir of Patrick Fraser Tytler, author of ‘The History of Scotland’ ; Horne, J. C. (2016) History and the Construction of the Child in Early British Children’s Literature. TYTLER, Sarah

see KEDDIE, Henrietta (1827–1914)

U URE, Joan

(1918–78)

see CLARK, Elizabeth Thomson (Betty)

born Kelvinside, Glasgow, 18 Feb. 1933, died London 3 April 1975. Actor. Daughter of Edith Swinburne, and Colin McGregor Ure, engineer. Educated in Glasgow and at the Mount School, York, Mary Ure was an actor of skill, range and beauty, frequently cast in vulnerable roles. She trained at the Central School of Speech and Drama in London, making her debut at the Manchester Opera House in 1953 in Alan Melville’s Simon and Laura. Her potential was swiftly recognised, and she made a dazzling West End debut at the London Arts Theatre in 1954 in Anouilh’s Time Remembered. In 1955 she played Ophelia to Paul Scofield’s Hamlet, appearing in this production in Moscow on stage and television. Her most memorable roles came at the Royal Court Theatre, London, in the spring of 1956 – Abigail in the first British production of The Crucible by Arthur Miller, and Alison in John Osborne’s Look Back in Anger. She also played Alison in the film version (opposite Richard Burton) and on the New York stage. Mary Ure married John Osborne (1929–94) in 1957; a tempestuous union, it ended in divorce five years later, when their son was one year old. By this time, she had fallen in love with Robert Shaw (1927–78), appearing with him in the Elizabethan comedy The Changeling at the Royal Court in 1961. They married in 1963 and had four children. URE, Mary,

Mary Ure played leading roles with the Royal Shakespeare Company at Stratford. Her films included Storm Over the Nile (1955), Sons and Lovers (for which she received an Academy Award Nomination in 1960), Custer of the West (1967) and Where Eagles Dare (1968). She claimed, however, that her preference was for the theatre and that she appeared in films to please her husbands. She returned to the stage in 1975, giving a powerful performance in Don Taylor’s The Exorcism at the Comedy Theatre, London. On the evening of the first night of this production, a cocktail of whisky and tranquillisers led to her untimely death. dc • Heilpern. J. (2006) John Osborne: a patriot for us; ODNB (2004); The Scotsman, 6 April 1975 (obit.). URQUHART, Margery, OBE, born Patagonia, Chile 27 Aug. 1912, died Aberdeen 9 May 2007. Daughter of Betsy MacDonald, and Alexander Urquhart, sheep and cattle farmers. Agriculture graduate, policewoman, special agent and social work pioneer. Margery Urquhart spent her first 11 years on a farm near Punta Arenas. In 1923, the family returned to farming in Milton of Culloden, Inverness. After three years at Inverness Royal Academy, she studied agriculture at the University of Aberdeen, ‘a negative decision . . . I knew I didn’t want to be a teacher’ (Focus 1975). On graduating, she worked on a Hampshire farm before joining the women’s police in 1936. One of only 50 women in the Metropolitan police, she was the first female

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member of the Special Branch. After training, she was used in covert operations against pre-war IRA agents (Scotsman 2007). Her friend Bob Holman said that though she was ‘reluctant to speak about her experiences as a spy . . . she was involved in tracking down enemy agents’ (Guardian 2007). She later became the first woman inspector in the Home Counties. After retraining as a probation officer, in 1949 she was Aberdeen’s first children’s officer, solely responsible for 700 children in the care of the department and 1,300 boarded out from other authorities. There she helped develop an adoption service to replace ‘boarding out’ and pioneered a series of life-changing childcare practices that later became standard throughout the UK: small residential units, preventive work and the re-uniting of siblings. She also set up the home-help system, introducing housekeepers to help single fathers to stay in employment and maintain the family home. She became the first director of social work for Aberdeen and Kincardine, in 1969. When the Local Government Act (Scotland) 1973 replaced counties with regions, Margery Urquhart did not head any of the new regions’ social work departments; men took every post. Appointed deputy director by Grampian Regional Council in 1975, she did become director shortly before retiring in 1976. In retirement, she was a Tory councillor in Aberdeen and an elder of Dyce Parish Church. SMD • Focus on Social Work and Service in Scotland, Aug./Sept. 1975, pp. 2–4; The Guardian, 28 June 2007, The Herald, 19 May 2007, The Scotsman, 24 June 2007 (obits). URQUHART, Mary Sinclair (Molly), m. McIntosh, born Glasgow 21 Jan. 1906, died Glasgow 5 Oct. 1977. Actor, theatre director. Daughter of Ann McCallum, post office clerk, and William Urquhart, sea-going engineer. Molly Urquhart was the eldest of three surviving daughters of parents from Tiree and Wester Ross. She lived all her life in Glasgow, in the West End and, after marriage, in Ibrox, enjoying a career of local, national and international activity and success. She attended Dowanhill Primary School and Church Street School, worked in a local shop, then passed an exam to join the GPO. As a teenager, she acted in the flourishing Glasgow

amateur sector with the St George Players and with Glasgow’s two influential ‘little theatres’, the Tron and the Curtain. She began working professionally in 1932 as a member of a Howard and Wyndham company. In 1934, she married police officer William McIntosh (1900–59); they had one son, James (b. 1943). She worked in repertory in Gourock with the Sheldon Brown Rep, and as a member of the company at the Festival Theatre, Cambridge, appearing in character roles in productions of Somerset Maugham, Emlyn Williams and Ivor Novello. In 1939, she founded the MSU (Molly Sinclair Urquhart) Theatre in Rutherglen, a venture she managed, directed for and acted with until 1944. Based in the converted Congregational Church in East Main Street, the theatre opened with Merton Hodge’s The Wind and the Rain on 2 May 1939. The company was a significant training ground for local amateur talent, including Gordon Jackson, Duncan Macrae and Nicholas Parsons, who went on to professional careers. The MSU project coincided with the launch of the Citizens’ Theatre, Glasgow (1943), where most of MSU’s nascent professionals were later employed. Molly Urquhart made her Citizens’ debut in its first season, as Molly Cudden in J. B. Priestley’s Bull Market, and her London debut in 1945 at Sadlers Wells as Mrs Grant in James Bridie’s The Forrigan Reel. Subsequent roles, many with the Citizens’, included Dame Sensualitie in the modern production of Lindsay’s Ane Satyre of the Thrie Estaitis at the Assembly Hall in Edinburgh (1948). Her appearances in the Citizens’ pantomimes, famously in The Tintock Cup in 1949–50, were extremely popular. In the 1950s, she combined performances in the Five Past Eight Shows and standard repertory work in Glasgow, Edinburgh and London. Film roles included Geordie (1955), The Nun’s Story (1958) and The Sundowners (1960). In later life, her focus returned to the amateur sector and charitable ventures and she was a champion of community-based activities in the Cessnock, Ibrox and Pollokshields areas of Glasgow. AS • Univ. of Glasgow, Scottish Theatre Archive: Molly Urquhart Collection. Murdoch, H. (1981) Travelling Hopefully: the story of Molly Urquhart; ODNB (2004).

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V VAKIL, Merbai Ardesir,‡ born Bombay (Mumbai), 25 May 1868, died Bombay 9 April 1941. Physician. Daughter of Ardesir Framji Vakil, Parsi solicitor. Merbai Ardesir Vakil attended Wilson High School and Wilson College, Bombay, becoming the first woman to graduate from there, in 1888. After studying at Grant Medical College, Bombay, she left to attend first the London School of Medicine for Women, and then, from 1893, Queen Margaret College, Glasgow. She graduated with the degree of MBCM on 22 July 1897, the first Asian woman to graduate from a Scottish university. After postgraduate work in Glasgow, she worked in the Cama Hospital for Women and Children in Bombay and in other hospitals and dispensaries. In March 1927 she left for Aden, first in the employment of the British government, and then in private practice. She returned to Bombay in poor health in March 1941. She was not, however, the first woman from India to achieve medical qualifications in Scotland. In 1888, Annie Wardlaw Jagannadham (1864–94), born to Indian parents in Chicacole (Srikakulam), Andhra Pradesh, and Annie Catharine Wells (b. 1868), also born in India, having spent some years studying medicine at Madras University, joined Edinburgh College of Medicine for Women, run by *Sophia Jex-Blake. Among fellow students were *Margaret Balfour, *Margaret Todd and *Elsie Inglis. In 1890 both women secured the ‘triple qualification’ from RCPE, RCSE and the Glasgow Faculty of Physicians and Surgeons. Annie Jagannadham, described by Sophia Jex-Blake as of ‘fine and finished character’ (Todd, p. 504) was appointed house-physician at Leith Hospital. Returning to India in 1892, she became the housesurgeon at Cama Hospital, where she died two years later of tuberculosis. JR

• Glasgow University Archives, Matriculation Records R8/5/14–17/10, Medical Examiners Schedule, MED 5/2/5, correspondence, DC233/2/10/6/1; RCSEd, Medical Schedules for the Triple Qualification, 904 and 955. Balfour, M. I. and Young, R. (1929) Medical Women in India; (1890) Second Report of the Edinburgh School of Medicine for Women, 1888–1890; ‘The Late Dr Annie Wardlaw Jagannadham’, Chronicle of the London Missionary Society (1894) 34, pp. 232–33 (obit.); Ramanna, M. (2002) Western Medicine and Public Health in Colonial Bombay, 1845–1895;

Somerville, J. M. (2005), ‘Dr Sophia Jex-Blake and the Edinburgh School of Medicine for Women’, Proc. Roy. Coll. Phys. Edin. 35, pp. 261–7; Todd, M. (1918) Life of Sophia JexBlake. VALENTINE, Jessie n. Anderson,

MBE, born Perth 18 March 1915, died Bridge of Earn 6 April, 2006. Golfer. Daughter of Agnes Scrimgeour, clerk, and Joe Anderson, golf professional. Jessie Valentine was for more than two decades one of Britain’s outstanding female golfers. Taught by her father, the golf professional at Craigie Hill in Perth in the 1920s, she won the British Girls’ Championship in 1933. Her potential was recognised by the Ladies’ Golf Union, which selected her for the Curtis Cup at Gleneagles in 1936 where she helped square the match for Britain. She represented Britain another six times (1936–58). She won numerous international and national titles: New Zealand (1935); French (1936); British (1937, 1955, 1958); and six Scottish Championships between 1938 and 1956. Jessie Valentine’s talent was exceptional; had it not been for the Second World War, her tally could have been even greater. Deemed a professional in the late 1950s by endorsing a range of golfing products, she could have become as well known as Laura Davies had she been born 70 years later. Awarded an MBE (1959), this very modest woman attributed her success to luck, an enthusiasm for golf and a natural talent. She was inducted into the Scottish Sports Hall of Fame in 2003. JLG

• Valentine, J. and Houghton, G. (1967) Better Golf Definitely; George, J. (2003) ‘Women and Golf in Scotland’, unpublished PhD thesis, Univ. of Edinburgh; The Herald, 11 April 2006. VEITCH, Marion, n. Fairlie, born Edinburgh or Lanark 1638/9, died Dumfries May 1722. Memoirwriter. Around 1706, Marion Veitch recorded her life story and her personal relationship with God, noting her godly (but un-named) parents and that she was ‘well educated’. She may have been the Marion Fairlie, daughter of Euphan Kincaid, and James Fairlie, shoemaker, baptised in Canongate Kirk, Edinburgh, 20 December 1639. By 1645, she was living in Lanark. She married the ­minister

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William Veitch (1640–1722) on 23 November 1664. Following the failed Covenanters’ rebellion at Pentland Hills in 1666, William Veitch went into exile in England to avoid persecution. Marion Veitch fled back to Lanark, then to Edinburgh; this enforced separation was one of many they endured during their marriage. Between 1672 and 1685, Marion Veitch and the children lived in the north of England, then briefly in Edinburgh, then again in England. William lived with the family only sporadically, between stints in prison and visits to London and Rotterdam. Shortly after James VII granted religious tolerance in 1685, the Veitches returned to Scotland. William and Mary Veitch had ten children; four died young. Two sons, William and Samuel, were prominent members of the failed Darien Expedition. At her husband’s last church, St Michael’s in Dumfries, a refurbished joint gravestone bears witness to Marion’s support of her persecuted husband and to William’s death, within one day of his wife’s. pbg • Veitch, M. [1706] (1846) Memoirs of Mrs William Veitch [by herself], Mr Thomas Hog of Kiltearn, Mr Henry Erskine and Mr John Carstairs, Committee of the General Assembly of the Free Church of Scotland. Anderson, J. (1851) Ladies of the Covenant, pp. 159–180; Veitch, W. (1825) Memoirs of Mr William Veitch and George Brysson, written by themselves, T. McCrie, ed.; ODNB (2004). VICTORIA, (Alexandrina Victoria), Queen and Empress, born Kensington Palace, 19 May 1819, died Osborne House, Isle of Wight, 22 Jan. 1901. Daughter of Victoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, and Edward Augustus, Duke of Kent, fourth son of George III. Queen Victoria was not ‘Scottish’ in any obvious dynastic way, but began the Hanoverian royal family’s links with Highland Scotland which have been maintained to the present day. Princess Victoria was regarded as an heir to the British throne from early on, since there were few other legitimate descendants of George III in her generation. When on 20 June 1837, her uncle William IV died, she succeeded, removing the need for a regency, since she was just 18. She was crowned in 1838. Her initial prime minister, Lord Melbourne, the first of ten, was one of her early advisers. When in 1840 she married her cousin, Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg (1819–1861), he became a major influence in her life politically and personally. They had nine children, all of whom survived (see Louise, Princess), and who became linked by marriage to much of European royalty.

The royal couple made their first visit to Scotland in 1842; in 1848, they bought the Balmoral estate, and rebuilt the castle during the 1850s. Alternating with Osborne House in the Isle of Wight, it became their retreat from London. Travelling up every year by train, they ‘embraced Scottishness wholeheartedly’ (ODNB 2004), dressing their children in kilts, and enjoying rural life. In 1861, Prince Albert died, probably from typhoid fever, a bereavement which devastated the Queen, prompting a withdrawal from public duties for several years. During this period, she became increasingly close to an attendant at Balmoral, John Brown (1826–83), who became the ‘chief focus of her emotional life’ (ibid.), and ‘her best friend’ (Longford 1964, p. 456). There were even rumours of marriage (unproven, and not seriously thinkable). He became a close confidant until his death in 1883, which was deeply mourned by Queen Victoria: she put up a memorial to him at Balmoral, where there was also a large monument to Prince Albert. The Queen had evolved an unshakeable calendar, dividing her time between Windsor, Osborne House and Balmoral: she regularly came to Scotland in May, returning in August and staying until November. Affairs of state had to be dealt with by the communications of the time, not always easy when she was in residence at the far end of Loch Muick. Queen Victoria again became interventionist in public affairs in her later years and did not always maintain neutrality in her dealings with her prime ministers, especially Disraeli (whom she favoured) and Gladstone (whom she did not). She welcomed her title of Empress of India (1877) and celebrated her golden and diamond jubilees (1887 and 1897), becoming the longest reigning monarch in the history of the British Isles, and lending her name to the age. Her funeral cortege on 2 February 1901 was watched by thousands. Balmoral retained its importance as a residence for later generations of the royal family, who have adopted a kind of alternative Scottish ­identity (kilts, outdoor sports), which however artificial ­originally, appears to be heartfelt. sr • Queen Victoria (1868) Leaves from the Journal of our Life in the Highlands, A. Helps (ed.), (1884) More Leaves from the Journal of a Life in the Highlands, from 1862 to 1882, and see ODNB (2004) (Bibl.). Arnstein, W. A. (2003) Queen Victoria; Longford, E. (1964) Victoria RI; Wilson, A. N. (2014) Victoria: a Life.

m. possibly Larini, born 1682, died Edinburgh 28 June 1741. Rope dancer, tumbler, actor, manager and dance teacher.

VIOLANTE, Signora Mariana,

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Italian, or possibly French but married to an Italian, Signora Violante was a celebrated figure in early 18th-century Edinburgh. There is speculation that she was in Edinburgh from 1719, but her connection with the city is probably later. She was in London in spring 1720, working with De Grimbergue’s French company performing pantomime, commedia dell’arte pieces and other entertainments. She was particularly noted for a rope dance with flags that was separately listed on some playbills. Signora Violante returned to London in spring 1726, performing in commedia dell’arte at the Haymarket, and stayed on as a tumbler and rope dancer. She ran a season of 70 nights at the Haymarket in 1726–7 with a programme of acrobatics, pantomime and dancing. Her children were among the performers, including two ­daughters; one, the dancer Rosina Violante, later became the wife of George Richard Escourt Luppino. Signora Violante was in Dublin in 1727 and then in Edinburgh, where the magistrates refused her company permission to perform. Thereafter, it performed throughout Britain, and possibly in Paris, with entertainments including a pirated version of The Beggar’s Opera in Dublin in which

the teenage Peg Woffington appeared. In 1735, Signora Violante performed in Edinburgh, where she settled, and continued her rope dancing turn in a variety of venues, as well as keeping ‘a much Frequented [dancing] School for the Young Ladies’, which Alexander Carlyle, minister of Inveresk and chronicler of Lothian society, attended in his youth (Carlyle 1973, p.25). She was described as a ‘virago’ (Arnot 1779, p.366) and styled an ‘evil genius’ by Lee Lewes (Lewes 1805, vol. 3, p.28), but defended in James Dibdin’s history of Scottish theatre (Dibdin 1888, p.35). She died worth £127 5s, leaving two surviving children in Edinburgh, Andreas and Jenny, or Jean, Larini. AS • RD2/155, 27 Mar. 1744: NRS Inventory. Arnot, H. (1779) The History of Edinburgh; Carlyle, A. (1973) Anecdotes and Characters of the Times, J. Kinsley (ed.); Dibdin, J. C. (1888) Annals of the Edinburgh Stage; Highfill, P. H. Jr, Burnim, K. A. and. Langhans, E. A. (c. 1973–93) A Biographical Dictionary of Actors . . . and Other Stage Personnel in London, 1660–1800; Lewes, C. L. (1805) Memoirs of Charles Lee Lewes; McArdle, G. (2005) ‘Signora Violante and her troop of dancers, 1729–32’, Eighteenth-Century Ireland, 20, pp. 55–78; ODNB (2004). Private information

W WADDELL, Roberta Johanna (Bertha), MBE, born Uddingston 17 June 1907, died Cambuslang 17 August 1980. Theatre writer, actor, director and manager; WADDELL, Janet Jane (Jenny), born Uddingston 13 August 1905, died Uddingston 7 January 1984. Theatre director and costume designer, musical accompanist. Daughters of Jean Leadbetter Swan, primary headmistress, and John Jeffrey Waddell, architect. The Waddell sisters’ parents were profoundly interested in the arts. As youngsters, the sisters saw Anna Pavlova dance and Forbes Robertson and Ellen Terry act. Governess-educated, they learned dance, singing and piano, later attending drama and speech classes in Glasgow. Both joined local amateur companies and then the Scottish National Players. Bertha Waddell played, aged 15, a lead role at the Athenaeum in Glasgow, going on to become LRAM. Meantime, Jenny Waddell developed as a musical accompanist. Complementary talents helped them establish the first professional

company specifically for children, launched in 1927 in the McLellan Galleries, Glasgow, as the Scottish Children’s Theatre (later The Children’s Theatre, Bertha Waddell’s Children’s Theatre). Positive reactions to their first performances led to their beginning to tour, initially to Bearsden, Hamilton and Stirling. Directors of Education noticed them and, beginning with Lanarkshire, they were invited to perform in schools during the day, an important recognition. In 1930, CUKT awarded them £300. Their touring developed on a seasonal basis into schools and public halls throughout Scotland and sometimes beyond. They often spoke of being invited to perform for Princesses Elizabeth and *Margaret (see Snowdon) at Glamis in 1933 and 1935 and at Buckingham Palace in 1937, and for new royal children in 1953, 1955 and 1967. The SAC supported their company, and by their retirement in 1968, which they spent in the family home near Blantyre, whole generations of Scottish children had enjoyed their work. 441

WADDELL

Italian, or possibly French but married to an Italian, Signora Violante was a celebrated figure in early 18th-century Edinburgh. There is speculation that she was in Edinburgh from 1719, but her connection with the city is probably later. She was in London in spring 1720, working with De Grimbergue’s French company performing pantomime, commedia dell’arte pieces and other entertainments. She was particularly noted for a rope dance with flags that was separately listed on some playbills. Signora Violante returned to London in spring 1726, performing in commedia dell’arte at the Haymarket, and stayed on as a tumbler and rope dancer. She ran a season of 70 nights at the Haymarket in 1726–7 with a programme of acrobatics, pantomime and dancing. Her children were among the performers, including two ­daughters; one, the dancer Rosina Violante, later became the wife of George Richard Escourt Luppino. Signora Violante was in Dublin in 1727 and then in Edinburgh, where the magistrates refused her company permission to perform. Thereafter, it performed throughout Britain, and possibly in Paris, with entertainments including a pirated version of The Beggar’s Opera in Dublin in which

the teenage Peg Woffington appeared. In 1735, Signora Violante performed in Edinburgh, where she settled, and continued her rope dancing turn in a variety of venues, as well as keeping ‘a much Frequented [dancing] School for the Young Ladies’, which Alexander Carlyle, minister of Inveresk and chronicler of Lothian society, attended in his youth (Carlyle 1973, p.25). She was described as a ‘virago’ (Arnot 1779, p.366) and styled an ‘evil genius’ by Lee Lewes (Lewes 1805, vol. 3, p.28), but defended in James Dibdin’s history of Scottish theatre (Dibdin 1888, p.35). She died worth £127 5s, leaving two surviving children in Edinburgh, Andreas and Jenny, or Jean, Larini. AS • RD2/155, 27 Mar. 1744: NRS Inventory. Arnot, H. (1779) The History of Edinburgh; Carlyle, A. (1973) Anecdotes and Characters of the Times, J. Kinsley (ed.); Dibdin, J. C. (1888) Annals of the Edinburgh Stage; Highfill, P. H. Jr, Burnim, K. A. and. Langhans, E. A. (c. 1973–93) A Biographical Dictionary of Actors . . . and Other Stage Personnel in London, 1660–1800; Lewes, C. L. (1805) Memoirs of Charles Lee Lewes; McArdle, G. (2005) ‘Signora Violante and her troop of dancers, 1729–32’, Eighteenth-Century Ireland, 20, pp. 55–78; ODNB (2004). Private information

W WADDELL, Roberta Johanna (Bertha), MBE, born Uddingston 17 June 1907, died Cambuslang 17 August 1980. Theatre writer, actor, director and manager; WADDELL, Janet Jane (Jenny), born Uddingston 13 August 1905, died Uddingston 7 January 1984. Theatre director and costume designer, musical accompanist. Daughters of Jean Leadbetter Swan, primary headmistress, and John Jeffrey Waddell, architect. The Waddell sisters’ parents were profoundly interested in the arts. As youngsters, the sisters saw Anna Pavlova dance and Forbes Robertson and Ellen Terry act. Governess-educated, they learned dance, singing and piano, later attending drama and speech classes in Glasgow. Both joined local amateur companies and then the Scottish National Players. Bertha Waddell played, aged 15, a lead role at the Athenaeum in Glasgow, going on to become LRAM. Meantime, Jenny Waddell developed as a musical accompanist. Complementary talents helped them establish the first professional

company specifically for children, launched in 1927 in the McLellan Galleries, Glasgow, as the Scottish Children’s Theatre (later The Children’s Theatre, Bertha Waddell’s Children’s Theatre). Positive reactions to their first performances led to their beginning to tour, initially to Bearsden, Hamilton and Stirling. Directors of Education noticed them and, beginning with Lanarkshire, they were invited to perform in schools during the day, an important recognition. In 1930, CUKT awarded them £300. Their touring developed on a seasonal basis into schools and public halls throughout Scotland and sometimes beyond. They often spoke of being invited to perform for Princesses Elizabeth and *Margaret (see Snowdon) at Glamis in 1933 and 1935 and at Buckingham Palace in 1937, and for new royal children in 1953, 1955 and 1967. The SAC supported their company, and by their retirement in 1968, which they spent in the family home near Blantyre, whole generations of Scottish children had enjoyed their work. 441

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Bertha Waddell took the lead and, with her sister, developed a very particular style. Shows began with a sound effect and Bertha’s head appearing through the curtains, announcing ‘Item Number One’. Each performance comprised some dozen or more individually introduced scenes, usually based on folk tales or nursery rhymes. Some used mime or puppets, and music and song were central to the aesthetic. Design was simple, suited to touring constraints. In the 1950s, children’s drama began to involve children themselves, engaging them with social and educational issues, and the Waddells’ themes and modes came to seem oldfashioned. Bertha Waddell, while defending their values, wanted their scripts to be destroyed after her death (it is not known whether this was done), believing people would laugh at them. Yet the Waddells were the first to address British children’s theatre provision creatively, and their pioneering work is fondly remembered. ib • Casciani, E. (1980–1) ‘Item Number One’, The Scots Magazine, vol. 114, pp. 391–8; McKeever, J. (1982) ‘The Bertha Waddell Children’s Theatre’, Scottish Theatre News, August, pp. 32–3. Personal knowledge.

m. Eaton, born Hendersyde Park, near Kelso 28 Sept. 1788, died London 28 April 1859. Writer. Daughter of Ann Ormston and George Waldie. Charlotte Waldie is known for her highly successful travel journal, first published in 1817 in the immediate aftermath of the Napoleonic Wars. Its title, Narrative of a Residence in Belgium during the Campaign of 1815 and of a Visit to the Field of Waterloo (by an Englishwoman), secured immediate attention. In it, she described a trip she made to Brussels in 1815 with her brother John and younger sister Jane. She witnessed the panic and chaos that beset so much of Western Europe following Waterloo, and gave descriptions of the battlefield, with all its horrors, just a few weeks after the event. It was seen as one of the foremost contemporary accounts ‘by other than military writers’ (DNB 1909). She subsequently published two novels and the three-volume Rome in the Nineteenth Century (1820), with accounts of historical buildings and monuments, which went into six editions and was considered, eighty-nine years later, as still useful to travellers. She married banker Stephen Eaton (d. 1834) in 1822. They lived at Ketton Hall in Rutland and had two sons and two daughters. On her husband’s death, Charlotte Eaton took his

WALDIE, Charlotte Anne,

place as an active senior partner in the bank Eaton, Cayley & Co., on one occasion addressing a crowd of depositors to prevent a run on the bank. Her sister Jane Waldie m. Watts (1793–1826) studied painting with Alexander Nasmyth (see Nasmyth, Jane) and also published an account of her travels in Italy. SN • Eaton, C. A., Works as above, and (1827) Continental Adventures, (1831) At Home and Abroad; or, Memoirs of Emily de Cardonnell by the author of ‘Rome in the nineteenth century’; Waldie, J. (1820) Sketches Descriptive of Italy in the Years 1816 and 1817. Dawes, M. and Selwyn, N. (2010) Women Who Made Money: women partners in British private banks, 1752–1906; DNB vol. XX (1909); Kennedy, C. (2009) ‘From the ballroom to the battlefield: British women and Waterloo’, in A. Forrest et al. (eds) Soldiers, Citizens and Civilians; Livsey, P. ‘Napoleonic Encounters: the Waldies of Forth House’, at hwww.newcastle.gov.uk/wwwfileroot/legacy/tynebridgepublishing/ waldiesofforthhouse.pdf; ODNB (2004) (see Eaton, Charlotte Anne); SHA; Walchester, K. (2007) ‘Our Own Fair Italy’: nineteenth century women’s travel writing and Italy, 1800–1844. WALFORD, Lucy Bethia, n. Colquhoun, born Portobello, Edinburgh, 17 April 1845, died London 11 May 1915. Novelist and artist. Daughter of Frances Sara Fuller Maitland, poet and hymn writer, and John Colquhoun, naturalist, author and former military officer. Lucy Colquhoun, seventh of nine children, was raised in a Presbyterian family with artistic and literary connections; her aunt *Catherine Sinclair and her grandmother Lady Janet Colquhoun were both religious writers. Her childhood was spent in Edinburgh, Oxford and Dunbartonshire. Educated at home by foreign governesses, from an early age she proved an avid reader of writers such as Charlotte Yonge, *Susan Ferrier and, in particular, Jane Austen. Austen, she later said, was to ‘exercise an abiding influence over all my own future effort’ (Walford 1910, p. 142). She successfully entered work for the RSA annual exhibition in 1868 and several years following. In June 1869, she married Alfred Saunders Walford (d. 1907), a young magistrate. They moved to Essex and, in 1900, to London. They had two sons and five daughters. In 1874, William Blackwood & Sons, Edinburgh, published Lucy Walford’s first novel, Mr. Smith: a Part of His Life. A popular work of domestic-centred fiction, it was praised by contemporary critics such as Coventry Patmore and

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admired by *Queen Victoria. Over the next 30 years she produced 45 further books and wrote for literary journals and newspapers, including Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, Cornhill Magazine, the London Magazine and World. From 1889 to 1893 she was the London correspondent for the New York-based The Critic, taking over the position from W. E. Henley. She continued to produce and publish work until shortly before her death. df

Tate Gallery, now Tate Britain) (1952) Ethel Walker, Frances Hodgkins, Gwen John; ODNB (2004).

• NLS: Blackwood Papers; Waddesdon Manor, Bucks: Kylin archive. Walford, L. B., Works as above, and (1910) Recollections of a Scottish Novelist ; see also HSWW (Bibl.). Finkelstein, D. (2002) The House of Blackwood; *ODNB (2004); Schlueter, P. and Schlueter, J. (eds) (1998) An Encyclopedia of British Women Writers. WALKER, Ethel, CBE, DBE, born Edinburgh 9 June 1861, died London 2 March 1951. Painter and sculptor. Daughter of Isabella Robertson, and Arthur Abney Walker, proprietor. Ethel Walker’s family moved to London when she was 9. She began painting early with little formal training. Much later, aged 38, she attended Putney, Westminster and the Slade schools of art, becoming a pupil of Walter Sickert and Wyndham Lewis. Success came late in her long life, which she spent between Chelsea and Robin Hood’s Bay on the Yorkshire coast, a subject for marines, such as Seascape: Autumn Morning (1935). Considered by some critics one of the best marine painters of her age, she was also known for watercolours, sensitive flower studies, and in particular for female nudes, not then a usual subject for women painters. She admired and emulated the Impressionists, particularly Pissarro. Prominent works are her watercolour The Judgement of Paris, the visionary Nausicaa (1920), and portraits, notably Vanessa [Bell]. From 1936, she was a member of the London Group. Contemporaries considered Ethel Walker ‘energetic, witty and wild about small dogs’ (DSAA, p. 588). Made CBE (1938) and DBE (1943), she saw her work exhibited widely during her lifetime at the RA, the Lefevre Gallery, London, and the RSA. The Tate held a retrospective exhibition of works by Ethel Walker, Gwen John and Frances Hodgkins in 1951. LS

• Birmingham City Museum and Art Gallery (1950) Six Contemporary Painters: Coldstream, Hitchins, Hodgkins, Piper, Vaughan, Walker; Corrymella Scott Gallery (1999) Ethel Walker; Deepwell, K. (2010) Women Artists Between the Wars; DSAA; MSW; National Gallery of British Art (afterwards

WALKER, Helen, born Dumfriesshire c. 1710, died Irongray, Dumfriesshire, 1791. Supposed model for Jeanie Deans in Sir Walter Scott’s The Heart of Midlothian (1818). In his ‘Introduction’ to the 1830 edition (Scott 1994, pp. 537–42), Scott described receiving a letter about Helen Walker’s story: she became the original of Jeanie Deans, a canny yet principled model of womanhood. In the novel, after refusing to lie on oath, Jeanie Deans walks to London in 1738 to secure from the Duke of Argyll a reprieve for her young sister, convicted of infanticide. The ‘sister’ did exist: Isobell Walker almost certainly killed her newborn child in Cluden, Dumfriesshire, in 1736. Villagers, especially midwives, were outraged. But no one like Helen Walker exists in court records, and the cause of the Great Seal Warrant of Remission that saved Isobell Walker from the gallows is currently unknown. The rumours that Scott heard about Helen, the ‘wily body’ (ibid., p. 539) believed by locals to know about the case, are all that survive. The memorial stone that Scott set up for Helen Walker is in the Kirkpatrick-Irongray churchyard. ds

• NRS: JC12/5, Isobell Walker. Crockett, W. S. (1912) The Sir Walter Scott Originals; Scott, Sir W. [1818] (1994) The Heart of Midlothian, T. Inglis, (ed.); (2004) The Heart of Mid-lothian, A. Lumsden and D. Hewitt (eds). WALKER, Marion, fl.

1597–1614. Critic of Protestant clergy, host to St John Ogilvie, defender of witches. Best known for hosting the secret masses of Jesuit martyr St. John Ogilvie in Glasgow in 1614, Marion Walker participated in a variety of forms of Catholic resistance to the Protestant Reformation over several decades bridging the 16th and 17th centuries. She disseminated the confession of *Margaret Aitken, ‘The Great Witch of Balwearie’, in Glasgow in 1597. The confession implicated one of the town’s ministers, John Cowper, in the deaths of several women. Her feud with Cowper carried on for many years. In 1599 she was brought before the presbytery for ‘railing against the clergy’, especially Cowper, and was shown leniency by the other ministers in the town, perhaps a recognition of Cowper’s imperfections. Marion Walker was a key part of a larger network of Catholics in Glasgow that facilitated the survival of traditional religion into the seventeenth century. Nearly all of them

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were ­questioned at Ogilvie’s trial, though they all escaped the Jesuit’s fate. DCM • Mitchell Library, Glasgow: Glasgow Presbytery Records (1597–9) (transcriptions) CH2/171/32B/178–9, 185, 192, 209, 211–12. Durkan, J. (1970) ‘John Ogilvie’s Glasgow associates’, Innes Review, 21; Goatman, P. (2016) ‘Religious tolerance and intolerance in Jacobean Scotland: the case of Archibald Hegate revisited’, Innes Review, 67.2. WALKER, Lady Mary (aka Lady Mary Hamilton), n. Leslie, born Melville House, Cupar, Fife 8 May

1736, died Exeter c. Feb. 1821. Novelist. Daughter of Elizabeth Monypenny of Pitmilly, and Alexander Leslie, 5th Earl of Leven. On 3 January 1762, Lady Mary Leslie married Dr James Walker (1731–before 1804) of Inverdovat, Fife, whose estate had heavy debts. The marriage was unhappy and financially troubled, and James Walker left his wife in the 1770s. Moving to London, she attempted to support the family through writing fiction. In her first two novels, both epistolary, Letters from the Duchesse de Crui (1776) and the equally lengthy Memoirs of the Marchioness de Louvoi (1777), plot and character were subordinated to moral instruction for young ladies. The Critical Review noted her eagerness to display familiarity with classical and historical texts, especially those dealing with the situation of women (Garside, I, p. 250). She consistently advocated improvement of women’s education. Her best-known novel, Munster Village (1778), is remembered for its portrayal of a utopian village community, architecturally designed to foster industry and learning, created by an enlightened, mature aristocratic woman, delaying marriage to fulfil her aims. Other themes (the need for women to be self-supporting, a plea for divorce and tolerance towards women’s sexuality) may be related to her unconventional life. By 1779, when Walker went to Jamaica to try to redeem his debts, Lady Mary Walker was relying on her mother’s financial help, but by 1781 had met wealthy Jamaican plantation owner George Robinson Hamilton (d. 1797), with whom she went to live in France. She had four children by her first marriage, and probably two daughters by Hamilton, whose name she took though they did not marry. Contacts with Britain became difficult during the revolutionary war. The couple were imprisoned as aliens near Lille for sixteen months in 1794–5. In 1797, George Hamilton bequeathed her his whole estate, including the 775-acre

Jamaican plantation Success for her lifetime, but in trust to ward off any ‘interference’ by James Walker. She set up a scholarly household, as friends, with English scholar Sir Herbert Croft (1751–1816) near Amiens in 1805, later described by Croft’s secretary, Charles Nodier, who translated Munster Village and helped Lady Mary Walker write a novel in French, La famille du duc de Popoli (1810). In 1815 she visited her Jamaican estate, returning to live with her youngest daughter in London. JR • NRS: GD 26/13, 674, 688–9: Leslie-Melville Papers; Yale Univ. Beinecke Library: Lady Mary Hamilton Papers, James Marshall and Marie-Louise Osborn Collection. Walker, Lady M., Works as above, and (1782) Life of Mrs Justman, 2 vols [no surviving copy]. Babchi, B. (2004) Pliable Pupils and Sufficient Self-Directors; Dahan, J. R. (1995) Charles Nodier, Correspondance de Jeunesse, 2 vols; Fraser, Sir W. (1890) The Melvilles, Earls of Melville and the Leslies, Earls of Leven, 3 vols; Garside P. et al. (2000) The English Novel, 1770–1829, 2 vols; Gentleman’s Magazine (1821) 91, p. 283; Jamaica Almanac (1840), at http:// jamaicanfamilysearch.com (14 Oct. 2004); Johns, A. (2003) Women’s Utopias of the Eighteenth Century; Munk, W. (1878) Roll of the Royal College of Physicians of London, 9 vols; ODNB (2004); Oliver, R. (1964) Charles Nodier (1964); Orlando: women’s writing in the British Isles from the beginnings to the present at http://orlando.cambridge.org; Pohl, Nicole (2006) Women, Space and Utopia 1600–1800; Wicks, M. (1937) The Italian Exiles in London, 1816–1848.

born Dundee 3 July 1863, died Dundee 1 July 1913. Social reformer. Daughter of Mary Allen, and Thomas Walker, solicitor. Educated privately at Tayside House girls’ school, Mary Lily Walker was a brilliant student at University College, Dundee, from 1883, studying Latin, maths and sciences. In 1888, some young professors, appalled at the condition of Dundee’s poor, founded the Dundee Social Union (DSU). Mary Lily Walker joined and was appointed superintendent of housing for the Union’s 102 houses. In London, she learned the social worker’s trade from Octavia Hill in Southwark and the Grey Ladies Settlement in Blackheath. She wore the grey habit for the rest of her life. Returning to Dundee and the DSU in 1889, she established a Grey Lodge Settlement in Wellington Street and began transforming the social profile of Dundee. She entered local government, researched and publicised the facts about industrial conditions, health and housing among poor workers, and intervened directly. In 1901, one of the first two women elected to the Dundee Parish Council (the other was

WALKER, Mary Lily,

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*Agnes Husband), she served on the Distress and the Insurance Committees, and was frustrated by resistance from male colleagues. In the voluntary sector, she moved as an equal with men. In 1904, with Mona Wilson she produced a large-scale statistical report for the DSU, Report on Housing & Industrial Conditions & Medical Inspection of Schoolchildren, which shocked people into action and helped change current perceptions of the poor as having only themselves to blame. To address high rates of infant mortality, following a French example, she opened restaurants for nursing mothers; the service was free if babies were breastfed, weighed weekly, and mothers did not go out to work for three months. Within five years, infant mortality fell from 246 to 183 per 1,000. Mary Lily Walker started baby clinics and home visiting of infants (later taken over by the ­far-seeing MOH); she helped establish a dispensary, a women’s hospital, milk depots, school dinners and an after-school club. She opened a class for disabled children and raised funds for transport to it. At Grey Lodge, girls’ and boys’ clubs flourished and the foundations for Dundee’s nursery schools were laid; in 1907 she organised Country Holiday and Recreation Committee ­holidays for over 3,000 children. A member of the Advisory Committee of the National Health Insurance Commission for Scotland, she took the lead in the Dundee Insurance Committee set up after 1911. Her 1913 survey of Dundee housing for the Scottish Housing Commission, showing evidence of overcrowding, was cited in the SHC Report of 1917. Mary Lily Walker never lost her passionate concern for the poor or her capacity for innovation, and never took ‘no’ for an answer. Her work was one of the main reasons why Dundee became the first city in Scotland to develop a municipal infant health service, influencing social reformers throughout Scotland. In 2014 the new Mary Lily Walker Building was opened at the High School of Dundee. imh • Walker, M. L. (1912) ‘Work among Women’, in British Association Handbook to Dundee and District. Baillie, M. (2000) ‘The Grey Lady: Mary Lily Walker of Dundee’, in L. Miskell et al. (eds) Victorian Dundee: image & realities; DWT; Grey Lodge Settlement Association (1999) Grey Lodge – A Century of Care & Concern; Paterson, M. (1935) Mary Lily Walker; Some Memories; Small, E. (2013) Mary Lily Walker: forgotten visionary of Dundee; Thompson, D. (1938) Fifty Years Ago and Now; Valentine, M. O. (1921) Dundee Social Union & Grey Lodge Settlement.

WALKINSHAW, Clementina, (Clementine), (aka Countess of Albestroff), probably born Glasgow,

c. 1720, died Fribourg, Switzerland, 27 Nov. 1802. Jacobite and paramour of Charles Edward Stewart. Daughter of Katharine Paterson, and John Walkinshaw of Barrowfield, merchant and landowner. A staunch Jacobite, Clementina Walkinshaw’s father had forfeited his lands and substantial fortune for supporting the Stewart cause in the abortive 1715 Rising. His youngest daughter, named after Clementina Sobieska, wife of James, the ‘Old Pretender’, was probably born at Camlachie House, one of the few remaining properties on the Walkinshaw estate in Glasgow’s East End. Little is known of her formative years. Raised as a Roman Catholic, she may have received a convent education in Belgium or France. By 1738, she had returned to Scotland. During the 1745 Jacobite Rising she met Charles Edward Stewart (1720–88), charismatic son of the Old Pretender, probably in January 1746. The precise nature of their relationship at this time has been much debated, and it is not clear how far the couple maintained contact after the Battle of Culloden. By accident or design their acquaintance was renewed in 1752 and they began living together as Count and Countess Johnson in Ghent. Their daughter, Charlotte, was born in October 1753. Financial insecurity and constant fear of British government surveillance made the couple’s life together difficult, leading to Charles Stewart’s alcohol addiction and propensity to violence. In 1760, Clementina left him, living in France and then Switzerland as the Countess of Albestroff. Charles Stewart legitimated his daughter in 1784 and made her Duchess of Albany, fuelling rumours that he and Clementina had been secretly married. Although Charlotte renounced any claim to the throne, Jacobite preoccupation with bloodline has elevated Clementina Walkinshaw’s importance in the Stewart dynastic saga. iem

• Berry, C. L. (1977) The Young Pretender’s Mistress: Clementine Walkinshaw (Comtesse d’Albestroff ), 1720–1802 (Bibl.); Craig, M. (1997) Damn’ Rebel Bitches: the women of the ’45; Douglas, H. [1995] (1998) The Private Passions of Bonnie Prince Charlie ; McLynn, F. [1988] (2003) Bonnie Prince Charlie ; ODNB (2004); ‘Senex’ [R. Reid] et al. (1884) Glasgow Past and Present, vol. 2. WALLACE, Eglinton or Eglantine (Lady Wallace), n. Maxwell, born Monreith, Wigtownshire c. 1754,

died Munich 28 March 1803. Dramatist, author, exile, reputed spy. Daughter of Magdalene Blair,

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and Sir William Maxwell; sister to *Jane Maxwell, Duchess of Gordon. After her parents separated, Eglinton Maxwell lived with her mother in Edinburgh in some poverty. On 4 September 1770, using the spelling ‘Eglantine’, she married Thomas Dunlop (1750– 1835), grandson of Sir Thomas Wallace of Craigie, Bt, whose name and title passed to Dunlop (1770). They had two sons, but in 1778 she divorced her husband for adultery and, helped by Henry Dundas, claimed her jointure from the estate, later receiving a government pension of £120. Boswell’s journals mention kissing the charming Lady Wallace in Edinburgh (29 September 1778) and other references. In 1787, in London, she published A Letter to a Friend, with a Poem called the Ghost of Werther: a response to Goethe’s Sorrows of Young Werther (1774) containing a plea for enlightened education for women. In March 1788, she allegedly entered the gallery of the House of Commons in male dress and had an affair with a ‘fortune-hunting colonel’ in Bath (quoted O’Quinn, website). These reports influenced the riotous reception at Covent Garden of her play The Ton (1788), which attacked aristocratic corruption and argued for female education and divorce. In 1789, visiting France, she was arrested as a spy and demanded an apology from Lafayette. In Lady Wallace’s Letter to Capt. William Wallace (1792) she again called for the reform of aristocratic behaviour, and analysed the causes of the French Revolution. Her Conduct of the King of Prussia and General Dumourier [sic] (1793) recounted her visit to the Austrian Netherlands, then annexed by the French under Dumouriez. Her admiration for the general was much satirised. Her Supplement to the Conduct of the King of Prussia (1794), Sermon Addressed to the People (c. 1794) and Lady Wallace’s Address to the Margate Volunteers (1795) supported Pitt and the British constitution, but still called for a reformed aristocracy. The Whim (1795), reversing the roles of servants and masters, was banned, but its message admired by the radical Thomas Holcroft. After 1798, living in different German states, she sent regular observations to Dundas and his agent William Wickham. Arrested as a spy by the French in Munich in February 1800, she was helped to escape by a French officer. She left as her heir her ‘dear and unprotected George Edward Hamilton Gordon’, possibly her illegitimate son. JR • NRS: CS 224/124 and GD51/1/639/1–11 (Corr. with Dundas); NLS: MS 11730, Acc. 11612 and 11730; NA: PROB 11/1398 Will, 3 Aug. 1803.

Wallace, Lady E., Works as above. Holcroft, T. (1796) Review, The Whim, Monthly Review, n.s. 19, pp. 94–6; Leneman, L. (1998) Alienated Affections; O’Quinn, D. ‘Introduction to Wallace’s The Ton’ in British Women Playwrights around 1800, at www.etang.umontreal. ca/bwp1800/essays/oquinn_ton_intro.html; ODNB (2004); Roger, C. (ed.) (1889) The Book of Wallace, 2 vols; Yale Edition, Private Papers of James Boswell. WALLACE, Grace Jane, n. Stein (Lady Wallace), m1 Don, m2 Wallace, born Edinburgh 20 Feb. 1804,

died probably Aberdour 12 March 1878. Translator. Daughter of Grace Bushby, and John Stein, distiller and MP. In 1824, Grace Stein married the older widower Sir Alexander Don (c. 1779–1826), MP for Roxburghshire and a friend of Sir Walter Scott, who remarked that Don’s wife played the harp ‘delightfully’ (Letters 9, p. 228). They had two children, their son becoming the actor Sir William Henry Don who later sold his father’s Berwickshire estate to pay debts. After Sir Alexander’s death, Grace married in 1836 Lieutenant-Colonel, later General, Sir James Maxwell Wallace (1783–1867). As Lady Wallace, she began translating from the German in the 1850s, at first concentrating on children’s books and contemporary women writers such as Elise Polko and Marie Petersen. She translated and prefaced a life of Schiller, and later translated for the publishers Longman a series of letters by the great composers – Mendelssohn (1862 and 1863); Mozart (1865) and Beethoven (1866) – which for a time were the standard editions. sr • Scott, Sir W. (1932–79) Letters, 12 vols; DNB (1903); ODNB (2004). WALLACE-DUNLOP, Marion, born Leys Castle, Inverness, 22 Dec. 1864; died Guildford 12 Sept. 1942. Illustrator, suffrage campaigner. Daughter of Lucy Dawson, and Robert Henry Wallace-Dunlop, of the Bengal Civil Service. Marion Wallace-Dunlop studied at the Slade School and lived mostly in London, while identifying strongly with her Scottish roots, having been named after *Marion Braidfute, alleged wife of William Wallace. She illustrated two children’s books, The Magic Fruit Garden (1899) and (with M. Rivett Carnac) Fairies, Elves and Flower Babies (1899), and exhibited in Scotland, London and Paris. She became best known, however, as a suffrage activist. Always an active campaigner for the vote, she joined the militant WSPU in 1908, and was the movement’s first hunger striker in July

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1909, in Holloway, pioneering this form of protest. She helped design several of WSPU’s pageant-like processions, on which the Edinburgh demonstration of 1909 was based. She faced prison again in 1911 after a window-smashing campaign. In 1916, supporting the WSPU drive to help babies orphaned by war, she adopted a baby girl. Having been a pallbearer at the funeral in 1928, she also gave a home to Emmeline Pankhurst’s adopted daughter Mary, cultivating a domestic lifestyle at Peaslake in Surrey. ra • Beckett, J. and Cherry, D. (1988) The Edwardian Era (exhibition catalogue, Barbican); Houfe, S. (1978) The Dictionary of British Book Illustrators 1800–1914; Lennon, J. (2007) ‘Fasting for the public: Irish and Indian sources for Marion Wallace Dunlop’s 1909 Hunger Strike’ in Flannery, E. and Mitchell A. (eds) Enemies of Empire: new perspectives, (2009) ‘The Hunger Artist Marion Wallace Dunlop’, TLS, 24 July; Rosen, A. (1974) Rise up Women!; ODNB (2004) (see Dunlop, Marion Wallace-); WSM.

m1 Robertson, m2 Gildard, born Glasgow 29 March 1891, died Edinburgh 23 April 1956. Artist and illustrator. Daughter of Helen Henderson, and Edward Arthur Walton, RSA, artist. Immersed in art from childhood, Cecile Walton attended ECA, 1908–10, meeting there her close friend *Dorothy Johnstone. She also studied in Paris and Florence. In 1912, she obtained her own studio in Torphichen Street, Edinburgh, marrying the artist Eric Robertson (1887–1941) in 1914. Her sons Gavril (b. 1915) and Edward (b. 1919) both feature in her work, including her striking picture Romance (1920, SNPG). The only woman to exhibit with the Edinburgh Group in 1913, she was one of their most fêted members at subsequent shows in 1919, 1920 and 1921. She exhibited at the RA and the RSA, winning the latter’s Guthrie prize in 1921. Much admired for her imaginative figure paintings, with their ‘decorative effect and skill of execution’ (Scotsman, 1921), she also produced children’s book illustrations. From 1926, she diversified into theatre design in Cambridge, her first marriage ending in divorce in 1927. The 1930s were spent organising the BBC Scottish Children’s Hour ; her second marriage, to BBC producer Gordon Gildard (b. 1899/1900) in 1936, ended in divorce in 1948, after which she settled permanently in Kirkcudbright. Her painting, having declined in output and inspiration, had begun to attract attention again, particularly her North African watercolours, at the time of her death. nji

WALTON, Cecile,

• ECA Archives: registers; NLS: Acc. 10425, unpub. memoir by Walton, C. (1950) ‘More Lives than One’. Walton, C. and Robertson, E. W. (1949) The Children’s Theatre Book for Young Actors and Dancers. Bourne, P. (2000) Kirkcudbright: 100 years of an artists’ colony; Kemplay, J. (1983) The Edinburgh Group, (1991) The Two Companions; MSW; ODNB (2004); The Scotsman, 4 July 1921; Stephens, J. W. (1942) ‘Cecile Walton and Dorothy Johnstone’, The Studio, vol. 88. WARD, Sarah, n. Achurch, born 1726/7, died 9 March 1771. Actor and theatre manager. Daughter of Thomas Achurch, actor, and his wife. Sarah Ward’s father was based in York. Her mother may have been the ‘Mrs Achurch’ appearing on a London playbill, 31 May 1734. The couple had at least four daughters. Sarah, aged 17, married actor and minor playwright Henry Ward (fl. 1734– 58). Her theatrical career began in the mid-1740s at York. She and her husband transferred to Thomas Este’s Taylor’s Hall Company in Edinburgh in 1745. Following internal disputes, the company split into two groups, one led by Sarah Ward, which expanded to include Lacy Ryan and West Digges (c. 1725–86), and opened at the new Canongate theatre in Edinburgh on 16 November 1747, after an unsuccessful attempt to perform in Aberdeen. Sarah Ward then made her London debut at Covent Garden in 1748 as Cordelia to James Quin’s Lear, and at Drury Lane in 1749, as Cordelia to David Garrick’s Lear. (Garrick, however, found her intractable and unteachable.) In 1752, she returned to Edinburgh with John Lee’s company, now including Digges, with whom she began a long affair. In September 1752, she joined Thomas Sheridan’s Smock Alley Company, and 1755 saw her return to Edinburgh, appearing as Mrs Sullen in The Beaux’ Stratagem. In a complicated financial dispute, John Lee lost control of the Edinburgh theatre. James Callender was briefly appointed business manager, and West Digges, having rejoined the Edinburgh Company in September 1756, controlled ‘artistic policy’. It was during this season, on 14 December, that Sarah Ward appeared as Lady Barnet (the character later re-named Lady Randolph) to Digges’s Norval in the premiere of John Home’s Douglas. It was one of her most popular and celebrated roles. She remained in Edinburgh until May 1758. After a season in Dublin, her relationship with West Digges finally ended and she returned to Covent Garden remaining there for the next twelve seasons. It is uncertain how many children Sarah Ward

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had: at least three with Henry Ward, of whom two, Thomas and Margaretta, became actors. She had six or more children with West Digges, although how many survived to maturity is unknown. as • Dibdin, J. C. (1888) The Annals of the Edinburgh Stage with an Account of the Dramatic Writing of Scotland; Highfill, P. J. Jr., Burnim K. A. and Langhans, E. A. (1973–93) A Biographical Dictionary of Actors . . . and other Stage Personnel in London, 1660–1800, 16 vols (Bibl.); Lawson, R. (1917) The Story of the Scots Stage ; *ODNB (2004); WWW in the Theatre (14th edn.). WARENNE, Ada de, c. 1123–1178. Daughter of Elizabeth of Vermandois, and William de Warenne, Earl of Surrey. Ada de Warenne’s marriage to Henry (c. 1115–52), son of David I of Scotland, was part of the diplomatic manoeuvering around the Treaty of Durham (1139), made between Scotland and the supporters of Stephen of England. The couple had three sons and three daughters. Ada became known as ‘mother of the kings of Scots’. Her witnessing of charters, first those made by her husband and later by her sons Malcolm IV and William the Lion, demonstrate her interest in political affairs. In 1152, Henry predeceased his father and Malcolm became heir to the throne. As a widow, Ada de Warenne was especially active as a religious benefactor. Her surviving charters are more numerous than those of any other noblewoman of the time. Sometime before 1159, she founded the convent of Haddington, which would become Scotland’s largest convent, and endowed it liberally. She patronised several other male and female houses, including Dunfermline, St Andrews, Durham, and Nuneaton in Warwickshire. She spent most of her retirement after 1175 at Crail and Haddington. kp

• Chandler, V. (1981) ‘Ada de Warenne, Queen Mother of Scotland’, Scot. Hist. Rev., 60 (Bibl.); Duncan, A. A. M. (1975) Scotland: the making of the kingdom; ODNB (2004) (see Ada [n. Ada de Warenne]). WARRISTON, Jean, Lady see LIVINGSTON, Jean

(1579–1600)

born Inverness 18 Jan. 1843, died Cape Town, South Africa, 7 Nov. 1932. Missionary, educationalist and doctor. Daughter of Agnes Webster, and Charles Waterston, manager of the Caledonian Bank, Inverness. The third of six children, Jane Waterston was taught by a governess, later attending Inverness Royal Academy. Her family belonged to the

WATERSTON, Jane Elizabeth,

Church of Scotland but she was strongly influenced by her Highland nurse, who subscribed to the evangelical ethos of the Free Church. Deciding, against her family’s wishes, to become a foreign missionary, on 9 October 1866, she became superintendent of the new Girls’ Institution at Lovedale, South Africa, the Free Church’s flagship mission station. Lovedale’s ethos emphasised education for all, regardless of gender or race. The founders pursued an assimilationist policy, intended in part to create an African elite. (Fort Hare, at Lovedale, later produced a generation of anti-apartheid leaders, including Nelson Mandela.) By the 1860s, this ethos was in tension with colonial emphasis on ‘native’ industrial training and Jane Waterston’s work reflected those shifts in missionary and imperial activity. Although seeking primarily to educate African girls as Christian housekeepers, she was proud of their academic achievements. The principal, Dr James Stewart, gave her a free hand. Forthright in her criticism of those (in Africa and Scotland) who showed less appreciation for the rights of female missionaries, she would defer to no one. Throughout her career, she was known with affection as Noqataka, ‘the mother of activity’. In 1874, she returned to Britain to train as a doctor. Her ambition was to work as a medical missionary in the Central African station, eventually established in 1877 as Livingstonia, under Dr Robert Laws (see Laws, Margaret). Her time as one of the first 14 students at the London School of Medicine for Women brought new intellectual challenges and a strengthening of feminist convictions. She completed her training and passed exams of the College of Physicians of Ireland in 1877–8 (later MD in Belgium). Despite attractive offers of employment in London, she remained committed to Livingstonia. She arrived in November 1879, but resigned after only four months and returned, disillusioned, to Lovedale. Her male colleagues had treated her with uncomprehending hostility and Robert Laws refused to acknowledge her superior medical and educational experience. Incensed at insinuations that she was there mainly to find a husband, she felt lonely and ostracised. She was critical of the harsh treatment of local people, which she saw as a reproach to Christianity. She established a dispensary at Lovedale but it was never recognised or funded by the Foreign Mission Committee and she had to give up in 1883. She moved to Cape Town, working in private practice and founding a pioneering free dispensary to provide medical services for women and children. 448

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For 50 years, her medical, educational philanthropic and political activities made her one of Cape Town’s most renowned citizens. A fervent imperialist, she was nevertheless committed to a non-racial South Africa, and remained at the forefront of struggles for women’s education and rights. She refused a DBE, but was awarded an honorary LLD by Cape Town University and in 1925 was elected a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians in Ireland. Thousands mourned her passing, and an immense gathering of dignitaries paid her tribute. lo • Bean, L. and van Heyningen, E. (eds) (1983) The Letters of Jane Elizabeth Waterston 1866–1905. Brock, S. (1986) ‘A broad, strong life’, in J. Calder (ed.) The Enterprising Scot ; eODNB; Macdonald, L. A. O. (2000) A Unique and Glorious Mission; Shepherd, R. H. W. (1941) Lovedale South Africa 1841–1941. WATKINS, Meta Gladys (Margaret), born Hamilton, Ontario 8 Nov. 1884, died Glasgow 10 Nov. 1969. Photographer. Daughter of Glasgow-born Marie Anderson, and Frederick Watkins, dry-goods merchant. Margaret Watkins was brought up comfortably in a large family house near Hamilton, developing a taste for beauty, poetry and choral singing. Her father’s bankruptcy and her mother’s long-term illhealth brought a decline in family fortunes and the end of formal schooling. Aged 24, she left home in 1908, having been ‘nearly domesticated to death’ (O’Connor and Tweedie 2007, p. 37). She spent the next seven years in artistic communities in Boston and New York, notably at the Clarence H. White Summer School of Photography (1914), learning her skill ‘on the cusp of the shift from pictorialism to modernism’ (ibid., p. 14). An instructor at White’s school from 1919, she produced some of her most stunning images, including the domestic, yet non-traditional, still life The Kitchen Sink. In 1920s New York, she became an independent, creative and sought-after artist of strikingly modern advertising images, portraits and nude studies. After White’s death, Margaret Watkins’s legal dispute with his widow over a claim to prints was unsuccessful. Perhaps as a consequence, she left in 1928 on a supposedly short visit to Europe. In Glasgow she found her four elderly Anderson aunts in difficult circumstances at 41 Westbourne Gardens and, having cared for them, unexpectedly spent the rest of her life in Scotland. She did, however, travel from Glasgow to Cologne, Paris, London and the USSR (in 1933), producing unique images of street scenes. These were exhibited, if at

all, in the annual show of the Glasgow and West of Scotland Photographic Association, until 1937. War, the ‘aunt-hill’, and poverty took its toll, and while she still photographed industrial Glasgow, notably studies of the Finnieston Crane, she lived in obscurity in her big house, lost to the history of photography. Only after her death did her remarkable photographic archive come to light, bequeathed to her neighbour, Joe Mulholland, who actively promoted her legacy. Margaret Watkins’ work is now in collections in Scotland, Canada and the US, and her reputation re-established as a pioneer of modernist photography. SR • Glasgow City Archives (Anderson letters); McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario (Margaret Watkins Fonds). Mulholland, J. and Oliver, G. (1981) Margaret Watkins: photographs 1917–1930 (exh. cat., Third Eye Centre, Glasgow); O’Connor, M. and Tweedie, K. (2007) Seduced by Modernity: the photography of Margaret Watkins (Bibl.); The Scotsman, 29 Nov. 2009, ‘The hidden world of Margaret Watkins’; Financial Times, 13 Feb. 2015. WATSON, Alexandra Mary Chalmers (Mona), n. Geddes, CBE, born Calcutta 31 May 1872, died

Kent 7 August 1936. Early medical graduate, Chief Controller WAAC and farmer. Daughter of Christina (Nellie) Anderson, and Auckland Campbell Geddes, civil engineer. Eldest of five, Mona Geddes was part of a family originally Aberdonian, ‘well known for scholarship and public work’ (Gwynne-Vaughan 1936, p. 2). Her mother, Christina Anderson (1850– 1914) was a founder of the Edinburgh School of Cookery and Domestic Economy, with *Christian Guthrie Wright, and campaigned for women’s medical education. Mona’s sister Margaret Geddes (1878–1956) was active in voluntary social work, became a member of Edinburgh Town Council, was the city’s senior bailie, sat on many committees and was President of the SWRI. Their aunt, Mary Marshall n. Anderson (b. 1836) was one of the original medical students at Edinburgh with *Sophia Jex-Blake, but left to marry and qualified in 1880 in Paris, later joining the staff of Elizabeth Garrett Anderson’s New Hospital for Women, London. Four Geddes aunts ran a girls’ school in Atholl Crescent, Edinburgh, started by great-aunt Ann Anderson (1789–1855). Alexandra Mary was called Mona by her first ayah. The family moved from India to Aberdeen and London, before settling in Edinburgh. Educated at St Leonards School, St Andrews, she graduated MBChM in 1894 from the Edinburgh

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Medical College for Women, delighting her mother, and obtained her MD from the University of Edinburgh in 1898, the first woman to do so. The same day she married a fellow graduate, Dr Douglas Chalmers Watson (1870–1946). They practised medicine together and she assisted him in editing the Encyclopedia Medica. They had two sons. Mona Chalmers Watson worked as Senior Physician at the Edinburgh Hospital for Women and was on the board of the Edinburgh Royal Infirmary. An active supporter of the suffrage ­campaign, she cared for hunger strikers leaving Perth prison. In January 1917 the Army Council proposed to form a women’s army auxiliary to free men to go to the front. At the suggestion of her brother, Auckland Geddes, Director of Recruitment at the War Office, Mona Chalmers Watson was appointed Chief Controller and senior officer of the WAAC, a post she held for its first, formative year. She recruited Helen Gwynne-Vaughan as Chief Controller (Overseas). Among problems they faced were status, unequal pay, morals – and skirt lengths. She resigned her appointment for family reasons, her rank then equivalent to Brigadier-General, and was made CBE in 1917. Becoming an adviser on Scottish health policy, she also established a model dairy, having inherited a farm at Fenton Barns in East Lothian. Prominent in many women’s organisations, including the Edinburgh WCA, she was a founder of the Child Assault Protest Committee (1920) and a director and first chair of the feminist periodical Time & Tide. A ‘member of innumerable committees, a person to be consulted in all emergencies’ (ibid., p. 2), in the 1920s she became an expert member on the Scottish Board of Health’s consultative councils and a member of the Advisory Committee on Nutrition. In 1933 she was appointed to the Committee on Scottish Health Services, whose report (the Cathcart Report) was a model for post-war British medical services and helped lay the foundation for a distinctive Scottish health system (see Douglas, Charlotte). Committed to enhancing the status of women in medicine, she was President of the SWMA and the BMWF. In relation to honours, she was quoted as saying: ‘it has been honour enough to have lived through such great times for women, and to know that the generation after us will not have the same fight for liberty . . . But what glorious chances we have had to live through such years’ (Scotsman 8 Aug. 1936). jlmj / si

• Cowper, J. M. (1957) ‘Women on active service forty years ago’, The Army Quarterly, vol. LXXIV, July (c. 1967) A Short History of Queen Mary’s Army Auxiliary Corps; Crawford, E. (2002) Enterprising Women: the Garretts and their circle ; Edinburgh WCA (1939) Souvenir of Coming-of-Age 1918–1939; Geddes, A. C. (1952) The Forging of a Family; GwynneVaughan, H. (1936) Old Comrades’ Association Gazette, Sept., p. 2 (obit.); Jenkinson, J. (2002) Scotland’s Health 1919–1948; Mitchell, D. (1966) Women on the Warpath; ODNB (2004); The Scotsman, 8 August 1936 (obit.); The Scotsman, 7 Feb. 1956 (obit. Margaret Geddes). WATSON, Elizabeth (Bessie), m. Somerville, born Edinburgh 13 July 1900, died Edinburgh 26 June 1992. Suffragette, piper, violin teacher. Daughter of Agnes Newton, and Horatio Watson, ­bookbinder. At the age of seven, Bessie Watson’s parents encouraged her to take up the unusual activity, for a girl, of playing the bagpipes, in order to strengthen her chest as a precaution against tuberculosis. She was invited to play in the procession and pageant of women from Scottish history on 9 October 1909 in Edinburgh, which was organised by the WSPU with *Flora Drummond in charge. She remembered: ‘I rode on a float beside the Countess of Buchan in her cage (see Fife, Isobel of ) and played at intervals along the way. It was an exciting day for a nine-year-old, but a more exciting one was to follow’. A few weeks later, Christobel Pankhurst came to Edinburgh to address a meeting at the King’s Theatre and presented her with a brooch depicting Queen Boadicea (Boudicca) in her chariot. Bessie Watson gave the brooch to Margaret Thatcher when she became Prime Minister in 1979. Bessie Watson became an active suffragette, helping at meetings and wearing purple, white and green ribbons in her hair. She was invited to lead the Scottish contingent, with other ‘lady’pipers, at the Great Pageant in London on 17 June 1911: ‘I suppose they thought here was I, a girl of ten at that time, doing something which they always associated with men’. In Edinburgh she accompanied prisoners returning to Holloway, playing on the platform as the train left Waverley Station. She also played to the suffragettes imprisoned in Calton Jail. At the age of 14, she became the only female member of the Highland Pipers’ Society and won many piping awards. She went on to study French at the University of Edinburgh and became a violin teacher for Edinburgh schools. She founded the Broughton School Pipe Band, which she fostered

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for 27 years. In 1945, she married John Somerville, electrical contractor. hec

Highlands and Islands. She worked to the end during her final illness. ls

• PSMOHA: T60/87, Somerville, E., unpublished memoirs; AGC.

• Library of the GSL: Papers and corr. of Janet Vida Watson, 1923–1985 (GB 0378 LDGSL 1078); Imperial College Archives: Papers and corr. of John Sutton (ref: GB 0098 B/ SUTTON). Sutton, J. and Watson J. (1951) ‘The Pre-Torridian metamorphic history of the Loch Torridon and Scourie areas . . . and its bearing on the chronological classification of the Lewisian’, Q. Journ. of the GLS, CVI, 3, pp. 241–307; Watson, J. (1979) Rocks and Minerals, (1983) Geology and Man. Fettes, D. J. and Plant, J. A. (1995) ‘Janet Watson’, Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society, 41, pp. 499–514; ODNB (2004); Who’s Who (1981). Additional information: Lou Donovan.

WATSON, Janet Vida, m. Sutton, FRS, born Hampstead 1 Sept. 1923, died Ashstead 29 March 1985. Geologist of Scottish rocks. Daughter of Katharine Margarite Parker, embryologist, and Professor David M. S. Watson, FRS, vertebrate palaeontologist. Janet Watson, whose father was Scottish, was educated at South Hampstead High School, then at the University of Reading (1940–3), where H. L. Hawkins was her tutor and inspiration. A brief spell teaching was followed by a move to Imperial College, London (1945–7) and another first-class degree under H. H. Read. She then began the study of crystalline basement rocks to which she made a lifetime’s contribution. In 1949, Janet Watson married fellow post-graduate, John Sutton (1919–92) and the two formed a professional partnership immensely fruitful in its discoveries. Their two children died at birth. They published, in 1951, the classic work on the Lewisian gneiss of North-West Scotland (Sutton and Watson 1951). Working in Sutherland and Ross, they distinguished two periods of metamorphism in Archaean rocks: older Scourian and younger Laxfordian, separated by intrusion of the Scourie Dykes now dated radiometrically to c. 2.4 billion years. They later worked on the Highland and Grampian rock successions. Further work by Janet Watson focused on oreforming processes in Pre-Cambrian crustal evolution, regional distribution of uranium, the Scottish Caledonides, and involved substantial collaboration with the IGS (now BGS). From the 1960s, she and her research team worked with Survey geologists in the Outer Hebrides, maps being published in 1982 and a memoir in 1994. Janet Watson also worked in Greenland, the Channel Islands, Italy and Tanganyika, and published some 65 research papers in peer-reviewed journals and symposium volumes. With H. H. Read, she authored a muchneeded textbook, Introduction to Geology (2 vols, 1962–75). Her reputation was huge in geological circles and, in 1974, Imperial College appointed her to a Personal Chair. Among other honours, she was awarded the GSL Lyell Medal in 1973; was elected FRS in 1979, and was president of the GSL, 1982–4, the first woman to hold this office. Her papers include notebooks, maps and photographs illustrating her research across the Scottish

born Glasgow 20 July 1873, died Glasgow 2 Sept. 1959. Headmistress. Daughter of Rebecca A. Hannan, and William Brown Watson, cotton manufacturer. Margaret Watson was educated at Woodside Crescent School, Glasgow, and the University of St Andrews (MA 1897). In 1903, she co-founded Laurel Bank School, Glasgow, with Janet Spens (1876–1963), a graduate of the University of Glasgow, who went on to be a lecturer there in 1908 and Tutor to Women in Arts (1909). In 1908, Margaret Watson, usually known as Miss Hannan Watson in Glasgow, became sole proprietor and headmistress of the school, and in 1911 Janet Spens took up a post at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford, where she had a long career. In 1920, Miss Hannan Watson turned Laurel Bank into an incorporated school; she remained head until 1938, was reappointed co-headmistress during the wartime evacuation, and finally retired in 1944. Laurel Bank School amalgamated with The Park School in the 1990s to become Laurel Park School. Miss Hannan Watson’s wide-ranging educational, cultural and social welfare interests involved her in many activities in Glasgow, including secretary of the geographical section of the GRPS (from 1909) and vice-president of the GWCA and of the Franco-Scottish Society. She co-founded Phoenix Park Kindergarten (1907) and founded Hillside Holiday Home, Clynder, for convalescent workingclass children, opened in 1919 by *Princess Louise. lrm WATSON, Margaret Alexandra Hannan,

• Cameron, M. (1978) The Laurel Bank Story: 1903–1978; Glasgow Herald, 25 Oct. 1938 and 4 Sept. 1959 (obit. Watson); Mitchell, E. (ed.) (1953) Laurel Bank School, 1903–1953; *ODNB (2004); Oxford Magazine, 30 May 1963 (obit. Spens); The Times, 16 Jan. 1963 (obit. Spens).

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m. Sim, born Broadsea, near Fraserburgh, 24 Feb. 1833, died Aberdeen 20 June 1923. Domestic servant, fishwife, writer. Daughter of Helen Noble, fishwife, and James Watt, fisherman. From a large North East fishing family, Christian Watt grew up in Broadsea, near Fraserburgh. From the age of eight she worked as a domestic servant, as a cook for the men fishing off the west coast and Shetland, and helped her mother with the fish. She continued at school during the winter, when she was able to attend. Five of her seven brothers died in 1854: two drowned off New Jersey, one died in Australia and two were killed at sea in the Crimean War. She travelled to New York in 1856 to claim an inheritance from one of the brothers, working there for eight months as a domestic. In New York she ‘came face to face with reality, and the bitterness that burns in coloured folks’ hearts towards those who brought them there’ (Fraser 1983, p.62). She married James Sim (1831–77), a fisherman from Pitullie, on 2 December 1858. They had ten children, two of whom died, aged 13 and 11, before James Sim drowned in 1877. The deaths contributed to her breakdown and first admission to Aberdeen Royal Mental Asylum, Cornhill. When she returned home, her fish round had been taken and she could not get washing work either. On her second stay in Cornhill she began the memoir for which she is known, written between 1880 and her death. She was shown ‘how to keep a journal, and to make notes as something came into my head to revive my memory, and to write it down before I forgot . . .’ (ibid., p.112). After her final breakdown in 1879, the household was sold up and her younger children divided among relatives and friends. Her remaining 45 years were spent at Cornhill, where she worked in the laundry and was allowed out on home visits. Her memoirs give an exceptional view of the times and are full of descriptions of the privations of her community, a changing Scotland and the wider world, as well as an intricate record of her own family and work history, relationships and travels. Some doubt has been expressed about their authenticity but the facts of her life are not disputed. Even if the memoirs were ghosted by someone else, they retain value as recording an otherwise hidden life. An example of their vivid style is the description of class structures at Philorth House, near Fraserburgh, where she had worked for Lord Saltoun’s family:

them and us. I would look at the avenue which we were not allowed to use, it was like a mighty river of power, but petered out at the gate on the Aberdeen road, the publick [sic] highway which laird and tinkie man shared, the only thing they had in common. (ibid., p. 40)

WATT, Christian,

. . . there were a lot of daughters . . . a bunch of useless articles . . . a great gulf lay between

For her 90th birthday she had her portrait painted; ‘I don’t work much now . . . A lass . . . does my shopping, so I am like a lady of leisure’ (ibid., p. 154). abc • Fraser, D. (ed.) (1983) The Christian Watt Papers; ODNB (2004). WATT, Eilidh (Helen), n. MacAskill, born Skinidin, Skye, 22 Jan. 1908, died Inverness 25 August 1996. Writer. Daughter of Chirsty MacLean, and Malcolm MacAskill, blacksmith. A well-known Gaelic writer and broadcaster, as well as a secondary school teacher of English, Eilidh Watt specialised in accounts of paranormal phenomena. She professed to have second sight, though in interviews she sometimes qualified this claim since her experiences were not as a rule of a visual nature, as traditional seers described the operation of their clairvoyance, but rather states of emotion which she herself was able to interpret. Her willingness to talk about such experiences was, and still is, highly unusual: in Gaelic society, those who are reputed to have second sight are generally reticent. Her books are written in expressive, idiomatic Gaelic. La a’Choin Duibh (1973) (The Day of the Black Dog) is a children’s book, the title taken from ballad and folktale. More significant is Gun Fhois (1987) (Without Tranquillity), a work of 12 short stories whose leading motif is an awareness of the supernatural. The introduction discusses various aspects of this awareness, including that of evil, and the nature of the people who possess it. jm ac i

• Watt, E., Works as above, and (1989) ‘Some personal experience of the second sight’, in H. E. Davidson (ed.) The Seer in Celtic and Other Traditions. HSWW (Bibl.). WATTS, Mary Seton, n. Fraser Tytler, born Ahmednaggar, India 25 Nov. 1849, died Compton, Surrey 6 Sept. 1938. Artist, designer, craftworker. Daughter of Etheldred St Barbe, and Charles Edward Fraser Tytler, civil servant of the Hon. East India Company. Mary Fraser Tytler was brought up on her grandparents’ estate, Aldourie, Inverness-shire, and with her father and stepmother at Sanquhar, Forres,

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where her artistic career began. In 1867–8, the family travelled on the Continent and she visited art galleries in Dresden, Florence, Venice and Rome. She met the painter George Frederic Watts (1817–1904) in 1870 and studied at the Slade School of Art from 1872 to 1873. She was taught clay modelling by the sculptor Aimé-Jules Dalou and may have attended the South Kensington Art School. In London she involved herself in the Home Arts and Industries Association and was asked to help with a clay-modelling class for Whitechapel shoeblacks in 1884. She and G. F. Watts married on 20 November 1886, and spent their six-month honeymoon travelling to Egypt. They lived in his home in Kensington, where she had a studio, but in 1891, near Compton, Guildford, they had built Limnerslease, for which she made gesso duro ceiling panels. In 1895 they offered a chapel for the new village cemetery. It was decorated in modelled terracotta made in classes attended by the villagers. The interior was executed in painted gesso duro. Her chapel (1898) blended contemporary cultural and design theory. From the classes, Compton Pottery developed and after G. F. Watts died in 1904, it became ‘The Potters’ Art Guild’. In 1900 on the Aldourie estate, she set up another pottery, which survived only until 1904. Both made terracotta gardenware, while Compton also made gravestones and painted ornaments. Always known as ‘Mrs G. F. Watts’, she also designed carpets, embroidered banners and metalwork. Her role as ‘keeper of the flame’ of her husband’s work has been criticised and may also have overshadowed her own work. EC/LAMB • Watts Gallery, Compton, Guildford: Journals and corr., M. S. Watts. Watts, M. S. (1912) George Frederic Watts: The Annals of an Artist’s Life (3 vols). Boreham, L. (2000) ‘Compton Chapel’, The Victorian, March, pp. 10–13, (2013) ‘From Cumnock to Compton’, Northern Ceramic Society Journal, vol. 29, pp. 79–96; Chapman, R. (1945) The Laurel and the Thorn; Cumming, E. (2002) ‘Patterns of life: the art and design of Phoebe Anna Traquair and Mary Seton Watts’, in B. Elliott and J. Helland (eds) Women Artists and the Decorative Arts 1880–1935, pp. 15–34, (2006) Hand, Heart and Soul: the Arts and Crafts Movement in Scotland; Franklin Gould, V. (1993) The Watts Chapel, (1998) Mary Seton Watts (1849–1938); McMahon, M. (2013) The Making of Mary Seton Watts. ODNB (2004) (see Watts, G. F.); WoM.

and James Craw, she was tried for infanticide before the Privy Council in November 1609. One Bessie Pollok alleged that Beatrix had committed adultery with John Young, a Dumfries notary, and as a result of this Beatrix became pregnant. In desperation Beatrix visited Jonet Lyn in Glasgow who ‘gaif unto the said Beatrix drinkis to have distroyit the bairne in hir bellie’. This abortifacient worked and the foetus was then cast into a lime hole by James Craw. The Privy Council investigated the case further, but nothing more is known about it. However, it does prove that early modern Scotswomen knew how to facilitate abortions. Jonet Lyn may even have been a midwife who had legitimate access to abortifacients to assist women who were suffering miscarriages. mmm • RPC, viii, pp. 373, 375, 380, 406. WEIR, Jean (aka Grizel),

born c. 1604, died Edinburgh 12 April 1670. Schoolmistress. Tried for incest and witchcraft. Jean Weir provides an interesting example of witchcraft beliefs. At her trial she stated that her gift for witchcraft came from her mother, but that she and her brother, the better-known ‘Major’ Thomas Weir, with whom she shared a home in Edinburgh, had sworn allegiance to the devil. Referring to the Queen of Faerie, her interrogation illustrates an overlap between witchcraft and fairy beliefs. While Major Weir is remembered as a sorcerer, he was tried only for incest. Jean was tried for both, although convicted solely of incest; this being sufficient for execution, the assize ‘passed by’ the alleged sorcery (ScottMoncrieff 1905, p. 14). The Major’s sorcery was of a spectacular, diabolic variety; his sister sought chiefly to increase her capacity to spin wool. Contemporaries noted the ‘foolish’ nature of her death, where she attempted to throw off her clothes and expose herself to the greatest shame possible before her execution. sam

• Arnot, H. (ed.) (1785) A Collection and Abridgement of Celebrated Criminal Trials in Scotland, from ad 1536 to 1784; Hickes, G. (1695) Ravillac Redivivus; ODNB (2004) (Weir, Thomas); Roughead, W. (1913) Twelve Scots Trials; ScottMoncrieff, W. G. (ed.) (1905) Records of the Proceedings of the Justiciary Court Edinburgh, 1661–1678, vol. 2; Sinclair, G. (1685) Satan’s Invisible World Discovered.

m. Hamilton, born Glasgow 17 March 1910, died Middlesex 28 Nov. 2004. Actor. Daughter of Jeanie Davidson, and Thomas Weir, journeyman engineer.

WEIR, Molly (Mary),

fl. 1609. Infanticide suspect. Beatrix Weir was the wife of John Ferry, a bookbinder. Along with Jonet Lyn, John Young

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Molly Weir and three siblings, including her brother, naturalist and broadcaster Tom Weir, were brought up in a room and kitchen in a Springburn tenement. Her father died in the First World War and her mother painted carriages in Cowlairs railway works to feed the four children. From mother and granny, Molly Weir imbibed the virtues of hard work, thrift and self-discipline that informed her many acting roles as a no-nonsense Scottish maid or housekeeper. She left school at 16 for office work, becoming British shorthandtyping champion. After amateur dramatics, her ­professional career began in Scottish radio in the 1930s, and she became one of the first Scottish stars of British radio and television. With Sandy Hamilton, whom she married in 1939, Molly Weir moved to London in 1945, to work in theatre. Fame came through roles in popular radio comedy shows of the 1940s and 1950s: The McFlannels, ITMA (It’s That Man Again) and Life with the Lyons. Her screen debut in Comin’ Thro’ the Rye (1947) led to more than a dozen feature films, including The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (1969). Television work included sitcoms, dramas, panel shows and commercials (for a well known floor cleaner), and she played Hazel McWitch in the children’s serial Rentaghost (1976–84). Of diminutive stature (4ft 10in) and red-haired, her bustling energy, infectious laugh, sceptical manner and unmistakable Glaswegian voice all gave her an inimitable identity. She also wrote radio scripts, cookbooks, journalism and eight volumes of memoirs, the first three of which, Shoes were for Sunday (1970), Best Foot Forward (1972) and A Toe on the Ladder (1973), became a best-selling trilogy. Molly Weir was named Scotswoman of the Year in 2000. Her ashes were scattered on Loch Lomond. bf • Weir, M. (1996) Trilogy of Scottish Childhood and other Works. The Herald, The Guardian, The Independent, The Scotsman, 1 Dec. 2004 (obits); McBeth, J. ‘Final curtain for “sparky wee Glesga wummin” Molly Weir’, The Scotsman, 30 Nov. 2004; Miller, P. ‘A beloved Scots star for generations’, The Herald, 30 Nov. 2004; eODNB.

born Barrhead, near Glasgow, 31 March 1959, died Glasgow 22 Oct. 1999. Theatre manager and musician. Daughter of Mary Miller Wilson, comptometer operator, and John Catterson Weir, commercial traveller. Sharman Weir attended the John Neilson School, Paisley, before studying music at the University of Glasgow and flute at the RSAMD.

WEIR, Sharman Elizabeth,

She worked professionally as a singer and flautist between 1981 and 1984 and maintained her interest in music as a member of Paisley Abbey Choir. Thereafter she changed career by gaining a postgraduate diploma in business information technology (1985) from the University of Strathclyde. She then worked in software management for BP in Glasgow and London. In 1992, she undertook another major career change when she joined the Citizens’ Theatre in Glasgow as business manager, becoming general manager two years later. The tenure (1970–2003) of the artistic directors Giles Havergal, Philip Prowse and Robert David McDonald was celebrated for artistic innovation and bold European repertoire but a significant part of that success was a fiscal and managerial probity. In this, Sharman Weir was an essential figure, much relied upon and missed dreadfully following her premature death following her first pregnancy. Her death resulted in one of Scotland’s longest fatal accident inquiries, which found significant failings on the part of the Queen Mother’s Maternity Hospital, Glasgow. Sharman Weir was survived by her partner, Malcolm Fletcher, and their daughter, Mairi. as • The Herald, Oct. 1999 (obit.); The Scotsman, 25 Oct. 1999 (obit.). WELLS, Annie Katharine (Nannie Katharin), n. Smith, born Fordyce 29 Oct. 1875, died Oxford

18 March 1963. Scottish nationalist, writer and antifascist. Daughter of Jane Garrow, and William Smith, rector of Milnes School, Fochabers. Nannie Katharin Smith was educated at her father’s school in Fochabers, in Berlin and Paris, and the University of St Andrews (LLA). She married Bernard Wells, newspaper advertiser, in 1901 and had three sons; one was killed during the Second World War. She worked in the Foreign Office during the First World War, then spent time in Oxford before returning to Scotland where she became involved in nationalist politics. From 1929, she was secretary depute of the National Party of Scotland and then of the SNP. She was also secretary of the EWCA. Nannie K. Wells wrote regularly for nationalist publications such as the Scots Independent and the Free Man. Between 1932 and 1934, her Free Man articles emphasised the need for a more articulate political programme, while challenging those who would put internationalism before the need to improve the state of their own country (16 July 1932). In ‘The Financial Impotence of Scotland: An Infamous

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Libel’ (Free Man 2 April 1932), she argued the case for an economic independence from Westminster which would operate in the context of Scottish, not London, priorities. Most importantly, she was one of the first Scottish nationalists to speak out against Hitler and Mussolini; her article ‘Fascism and the Alternative’ (Free Man 26 August 1933) urging that ‘the power of this Challenge’ should not be underestimated: ‘Democracy is hardly on its trial any more; it has been condemned and dismissed in too many countries’. The article ends with the thought that Scotland may have the capacity to demonstrate the necessary qualities ‘of courageous decision, of endurance, of determined resistance to these false ideals . . . within us, Leadership and Liberty may again be reconciled as they have been more than once in our history as a Nation’. She was also friendly with members of the interwar literary revival, popularly known as the Scottish Renaissance. In *Helen Cruickshank’s Octobiography (1976) and Gordon Wright’s illustrated biography of Hugh MacDiarmid (1977), a photograph shows her in the garden of Dinnieduff, Cruickshank’s home in Corstorphine, at a party given to celebrate MacDiarmid’s return from Liverpool in 1931. Helen Cruickshank describes long arguments between Wells and MacDiarmid there, forcing her mother to scold: ‘Ye baith speak far owre muckle’. In a letter to *Florence Marian McNeill of 13 November 1934, Nannie K. Wells gives news of some of the ‘London Scots’ she has been seeing while looking after Donald Carswell and his son during *Catherine Carswell’s visit to Ivy Litvinov in Moscow. She envisages ‘a colony of us all, in our early old age, in the north. Eric Linklater, Edwin and *Willa [Muir], Don and Cathie (?) [Carswell] and you and me and Helen, with rapid and vivid sallies, raids over the Border for loot and riches’. Marian McNeill describes her in her obituary as a ‘colourful personality’ and ‘a perfervid Scot [who] retained her enthusiasms and youthful vitality until very near the end’ (Scotsman 1963). Nannie K. Wells also wrote poetry and is represented in Modern Scottish Women Poets (2003). She collaborated in an unpublished biography of Alexander Stewart, the Wolf of Badenoch, with Hugh MacDiarmid, who also wrote the introduction to her pamphlet on Byron, in which she claimed his genius as Scottish. Her affinity with MacDiarmid’s attempts to revitalise a stubborn Scotland can been seen in the witty definition she gave of her own recreational activity: ‘managing

rheumaticky minds with modern electric shock treatment’ (SB). mpm /bp • NLS: MSS 26195-259, F. Marian McNeill archive papers 1930–40. Wells, Nannie K., Works as above, and see HSWW (select Bibl.). Cruickshank, H. (1976) Octobiography; HSWW; MSWP; SB; The Scotsman, 22 March 1963 (obit.); WoM; Wright, G. (1977) MacDiarmid.

born Carriacou, Grenada c. 1804, died Edinburgh 22 April 1887. Slave, domestic servant. Daughter of an unnamed slave and John Wells, planter. Malvina Wells was listed at no. 124 on a list of slaves on the Grand Bay Estate, Carriacou, in 1817, as Malvina, ‘mulatto’ (i.e. she had a white father), ‘Creole’, supposed age 13, no distinguishing marks. She was owned by George G. Browne Mill and John Mill, whose estate was managed by George McLean, attorney. The date on which she came to Scotland is not known, but by 1851 she was working as a lady’s maid to Joanna MacRae (née McLean) at 33 Great King Street, Edinburgh. She died in Edinburgh on 22 April 1887. She is buried in the MacRae family plot in St John’s cemetery, Princes St, Edinburgh. Her gravestone describes her as ‘For upwards of 70 years a faithful Servant and Friend in the Family of Mrs MacRae Edinburgh’. ATM

WELLS, Malvina,

• Slave register T71/267 pp. 227–30; Census 1851 685/1 168/8; Death certificate GROS 1887 685/1 401. Legacies of British Slave Ownership database, www.ucl. ac.uk/lbs; Smith, M.G. (1962) Kinship and Community in Carriacou. WEMYSS, Lady Margaret, born Falkland 24 Sept. 1630, died 1648. Manuscript owner and lute-player. Daughter of Anna Balfour, and David, 2nd Earl of Wemyss. The eighth of 11 children, Margaret Wemyss had a short life, dying in the period after May 1648, before her eighteenth birthday. She owned a beautifully preserved manuscript of Renaissance music and poetry (NLS: Dep. 314/23). Preserved among the Sutherland family papers, it remained relatively unknown until the 1980s, when the musicologist Matthew Spring recognised its importance. Her signature appears several times on the volume’s flyleaf and on the first and final folios in a variety of spellings (‘Margarat Wymes’, ‘Margaret Weeyes’), perhaps reflecting the fact that the manuscript was begun on 5 June 1643, when she was only 12 years

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old. For the next six years she was to write music and poetry in it, though other more mature hands can be detected which may have included her sister Jean Wemyss (1629–1717). Margaret’s comment that ‘all the Lesons behind this are learned ut of my Sisteres book’ implies that Jean herself learnt the lute and had a ‘playing’ or ‘practice’ book of her own. After her younger sister’s death, and on her marriage to the 14th Earl of Sutherland, she probably took possession of the book. The manuscript epitomises the musical education which young aristocratic women received. Its music suggests that the traditional 10-course lute and also the 12-course were used. Margaret Wemyss’ book is certainly tutelary in nature, an aid to learning poetry, songs, and solo lute music, though the identity of her lute teacher is unknown. Many of the transcribed tunes are Scottish, perhaps reflecting what was popular at the time, and some lyrics are by Scottish Renaissance poets. The opening section may represent her first attempts at lute tablature; the second section displays a bolder and more confident hand, containing pieces attributed to French lute masters. Her growing strength and confidence as a lutenist is therefore portrayed. Usually referred to as the Wemyss manuscript, the volume is of immense value, attesting the richness of 17th-century aristocratic Scottish culture. It is also a young woman’s lovingly compiled possession, a personal and practical artefact which resonates beyond her time in the many later recordings of the music which it preserves. sd • NLS: Dep. 314/23. HSWW; Phillips, R. (ed.) (1995) Music for the Lute in Scotland, vol. 1, 20 Pieces in Tablature and Transcription for all Instruments; Spring, M. (1987) ‘The Lady Margaret Wemyss Manuscript’, The Lute, 27. WEST, Rebecca

(1892–1983)

see FAIRFIELD, Cecily Isabel

WHISKEY, Nancy (Anne Alexandra Young Wilson), m. Kelly, born Glasgow 4 March 1935, died Leicester 1

Feb. 2003. Singer. Daughter of Elizabeth Gibson, and Robert Wilson, textile factory worker. Nancy Whiskey’s father taught her to play the guitar, and she performed in Glasgow folk venues. She took her stage name from the chorus of the Glasgow folk song ‘The Calton Weaver’. In 1955, she moved to London with jazz pianist Bob Kelly (d. 1999), whom she later married. She became the vocalist with the Chas McDevitt Skiffle Group.

They recorded ‘Freight Train’, which appeared in the 1957 film The Tommy Steele Story and became a major hit in Britain and the USA. Their album ‘The Intoxicating Miss Whiskey’ was successful, but the follow-up album did less well. Nancy Whiskey went on to record three solo singles and an LP with studio backing group, the Skifflers, but never repeated the success of ‘Freight Train’, and performed less frequently after the birth in 1958 of her daughter, Yancey. She played the Albert Hall in 1997 with other stars including Lonnie Donegan, celebrating 40 years of skiffle. fj • The Guardian, 8 Feb. 2003 (obit.); The Scotsman, 5 Feb. 2003 (obit.).

born Edinburgh 29 Oct. 1894, died Edinburgh 24 May 1971. Author and journalist. Daughter of Ada Walton, and Thomas White, solicitor. Freda White was the sixth of seven children of a family in comfortable circumstances. Her father died when she was six, and she was brought up in Edinburgh by her intelligent and forceful mother. She was educated at St Leonards School and Somerville College, Oxford (1913–16), receiving her BA in 1921 when degrees for women were first awarded by that university. The year between school and university she spent in Geneva studying geology and perfecting her French. The death at sea of her beloved brother, Alexander, of wounds received in the Dardanelles, made her a lifelong campaigner for peace. From 1916 until 1918, through contact with *Elsie Inglis, she worked for the Serbian Relief Fund in Corsica. She taught in Edinburgh for a short while but soon returned to the wider world, working between Geneva and London for the League of Nations Union 1922–39 and writing League of Nations handbooks and numerous political pamphlets. In 1940, she became the assistant editor of the New Statesman under the editorship of Kingsley Martin. From 1943, she was information officer for the left-wing Daily Herald. She returned to Scotland as the Scottish officer of the United Nations Association (UNA) and stood unsuccessfully for the Labour Party as a parliamentary candidate. In 1954 she left the UNA to travel in and write about France. Her Three Rivers of France (1951) was for many years a steady seller and is regarded as a classic of travel writing. In her later years, a small and determined figure in her trademark tweeds and lacy jumpers, she was respected in the intellectual and political life of Edinburgh. She had an incisive, sometimes sharp

WHITE, Freda,

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tongue, c­ ounterbalanced by a keen intelligence, deep concern for her family and friends and a lifelong political commitment. lh

stories she had inherited. Her traditional stories included ‘The Cat and the Hard Cheese’, which appeared with others in the SSS magazine Tocher. smd oug

• United Nations publications (selected): (1926) Mandates, (1932) Traffic in Arms, (1946) United Nations, the first assembly, (1946) Conflict over Palestine. White, F., Work as above, and (1964) West of the Rhone: Languedoc, Rouissillon, the Massif Central, (1968) Ways of Aquitaine. The Association for Senior Members, Somerville College; Leslie Hills, ‘Freda White (1894–1971)’ at www.broughtons​ purtle.org.uk/sites/broughtonspurtle.org.uk/files/backissues/ No%2035%20PRINTER.pdf Private information: Mrs Virginia Holt (niece). Personal knowledge.

• Whyte, B., Works as above. Personal knowledge.

WHYTE, Betsy (or Bessie), n. Townsley, born at Old Rattray 7 Nov. 1919, died at Lizziewells Farm, Collessie, Fife, 13 August 1988. Storyteller. Daughter of Margaret Johnstone, and Alexander Townsley, hawker, farm labourer. Betsy Townsley was born into a family of tent-dwelling travellers. They lived a hard life in Perthshire and Angus, doing seasonal farm work. In winter, the family ‘housed up’ in Brechin where she attended school, being an able pupil. But a scholarship to Brechin High School brought her up against prejudice among fellow pupils, as she later recounted in The Yellow on the Broom (1979), a title referring to her father’s promise to take his family back on the road in May, when the broom was in flower. In 1939, she married Bryce Whyte, who was wounded in the Seaforth Highlanders in the Second World War. They settled in Montrose and brought up their family there, continuing to do seasonal farm work. Linda Williamson and Peter Cook of the School of Scottish Studies (SSS) met Betsy Whyte through Linda’s husband, storyteller Duncan Williamson, and encouraged her to write her life story. The Yellow on the Broom, written by hand in exercise books with very little editing, was a bestseller, being adapted for the stage by the Winged Horse Theatre Co. and successfully restaged in Perth in 2004. Well known at festivals and on radio and TV as a storyteller, Betsy Whyte also sang ballads, notably ‘Young Johnstone’, which came from her mother’s family. Her second book, Red Rowans and Wild Honey (1990), was completed before her sudden death in 1988, at the Auchtermuchty Festival of the Traditional Music and Song Association of Scotland. A wise, perceptive person with the gift of second sight, Betsy Whyte spoke of her love of those whose ballads and

WHYTE, Helen Kathleen Ramsay (Kath), MBE, born Arbroath 4 August 1909, died Newton Mearns 12 Feb. 1996. Embroiderer and educator. Daughter of Betsy D. Matthews, lady’s maid, and Henry S. Whyte, engineer. Kath Whyte spent her early life in India and Scotland, attending Loreto Convent School, Darjeeling, Arbroath High School, and Gray’s School of Art, Aberdeen (Diploma with distinction in Design and Decorative Art 1932). After teaching in Aberdeen schools and at Gray’s, she was appointed embroidery and weaving lecturer at the GSA in 1948, and became head of department, retiring in 1974. She emphasised drawing as a foundation for good design and revitalised the course, introducing techniques such as machine embroidery, while also advocating traditional methods employed in innovative ways. Her thought-­provoking teaching inspired generations of students, as did her concern that embroidery be accepted as a valid means of artistic expression. The GSA Embroidery Group, which she started, held its first exhibition in 1957. An adviser to the SED and validator for English DipAD courses, she was the outstanding influence of her generation on embroidery in Scotland. Her many articles and her book, Design in Embroidery (1969), received world recognition. A practising embroiderer, she undertook many commissions, and is probably best known for her ecclesiastical work (e.g. in Bearsden, Eaglesham and Mayfield, Edinburgh), also shown at exhibitions of ecclesiastical embroidery in St Paul’s Cathedral (1968) and Hereford Cathedral (1976). She embroidered a silk stole, using pearls from the River Tay, presented to *Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother at the Tay Road Bridge opening in 1966. An honorary member of the GSWA, she was made MBE in 1969 for services to art education, and in 1987 a retrospective of her work was held by Scottish branches of the Embroiderers’ Guild. sh

• GSA Archives: DC 029 (Papers and textile work of Kath Whyte; notebooks and corr. from Gray’s School of Art); samples of work at RMS, GSA, V&A, etc. Whyte, K. (1969, 1983) Design in Embroidery. Arthur, L. (1989) Kathleen Whyte, Embroiderer ; The Herald, 15 Feb. 1996 (obit.).

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WIGHAM WIGHAM, Eliza, born Edinburgh 23 Feb. 1820, died Dublin 3 Nov. 1899. Campaigner for women’s suffrage, anti-slavery, peace and temperance. Daughter of Jane Richardson, and John Wigham, cotton and shawl manufacturer. Eliza Wigham was born into a network of Quaker reforming families. Her father was a prominent abolitionist and a leader of the Edinburgh Emancipation Society; his cousin John Wigham junior, who lived nearby in Edinburgh, was the son of *Elizabeth Wigham. Throughout her happy childhood, she was surrounded by ‘some of the leading spirits of progress and philanthropy’ (Society of Friends 1901, p.166). She lost her mother, her eldest sister and a young brother when she was about 10 years old, but the family and the network were strengthened by her father’s second marriage, in 1840, to Jane Smeal (1801/2–88), daughter of William Smeal, a Glasgow Quaker and tea merchant. Jane Smeal, educated at the Quaker Ackworth School in Yorkshire, had led the Glasgow Ladies Emancipation Society, and published a pamphlet with *Elizabeth Pease [Nichol], Address to the Women of Great Britain (1838), calling on women to form female anti-slavery associations and speak at public meetings. Her relationship with Eliza Wigham became one of committed co-operation in reform. Eliza Wigham, leader of the Edinburgh Ladies Emancipation Society, has been described as one of six key women in the British ‘transatlantic antislavery sisterhood’ (Midgley 1992, p. 132). From the mid-1840s to the 1870s she corresponded with leading radical abolitionists in the United States. She attended the Edinburgh Meeting House, travelled around Scotland and acted as a Quaker minister. She also worked for the repeal of the Contagious Diseases Acts. In the 1870s she joined the women’s temperance movement; as an Executive Committee member of the BWTA and the Scottish Christian Union, she worked to promote prohibition legislation. From 1870 to the 1890s, she actively lobbied for legislation on women’s political, social and economic rights, becoming Secretary of ENSWS and serving on the executive committee and the legal committee of the SWLF. As a Quaker, she was fundamentally opposed to war, advocating a High Court of Nations to settle all international disputes (Women’s Penny Paper 1890, p. 409). Eliza Wigham remained single, nursing her stepmother through a long illness until her death. Ten years later, herself infirm, she went to live with family in Dublin, where she died. mks

• Library of the Society of Friends, London: ‘Dictionary of Quaker Biography’ (n.d.) unpublished; Knox, W. W. J. (2006) The Lives of Scottish Women; Midgley, C. (1992) Women Against Slavery: the British campaigns, 1750–1870; ODNB (2004); Society of Friends (1901) ‘Eliza Wigham’, Annual Monitor, 53, pp. 165–86; Women’s Penny Paper 2, 87, 21 June 1890, pp. 409–10. www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/REsmeal.htm WIGHAM, Elizabeth, n. Dunwode/Donwiddy, born

24 March 1748 at Ambroseholm, near Carlisle, died Aberdeen 16 April 1827. Quaker preacher. Daughter of Quakers Bette Dunwode and John Dunwode. As Elizabeth Donwiddy, she married the Quaker John Wigham (1749–1839) in 1769, moving to Coanwood, Northumberland. A few years after marriage she felt called to the ministry; in 1784, also under divine calling, the couple moved to Edinburgh, in 1786 to Aberdeen, and two years later to a farm in Kinmuck, north of Aberdeen. On returning to Edinburgh, in 1791 with Ann Miller, another Quaker preacher, she helped to found the first separate Women’s Meeting in Scotland there, approving, at a conference of women Friends, ‘the propriety of holding Meetings for discipline separate from the Men’ (Burton, p. 85). Shortly afterwards she participated in Women’s Monthly Meetings in Aberdeen and Kinmuck. From 1792 to 1803 she preached widely across Britain and Ireland. The family finally settled in Aberdeen in July 1807. Her ministry is described as ‘lively and fervent and although not adorned with much learning, was clear, sound and pertinent’ (Wigham, p. 124n). A minister for over fifty years, Elizabeth Wigham, with her husband, did much to build up the influence of the Society of Friends in Scotland. Their seven children included the anti-slavery campaigner John Wigham junior (1781–1862), who was joined in Edinburgh in 1805 by his cousin John Wigham tertius, the father of *Eliza Wigham. Elizabeth Wigham was buried in the Quaker burial ground at Kinmuck. JR

• Dictionary of Quaker Biography, Friends’ House, London. Burton, P. F. (2007) Social History of Quakers in Scotland, 1800–2000; http://benbeck.co.uk/fh/wigham.html#P4; Wigham, J. (1842) Memoirs of the Life, Gospel Labours, and Religious Experiences of John Wigham.

m. Robinson, born Montrose 8 June 1874, died Perth 29 Sept. 1925. Suffragette and Labour activist. Daughter of Catherine Jane Erskine, teacher, and John Wilkie, draper.

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After a straitened childhood, Annot Wilkie attended Montrose Academy, where she worked as a pupil teacher until she was 16. She went to teacher training college before taking external classes at the University of St Andrews (LLA, 1901). She was a teacher in Dundee and Lochgelly, a member of the ILP and in 1906 became the first secretary of the Dundee branch of the WSPU. Her sister Helen Wilkie (b. 1882), possibly also a teacher, organised women, many from the textile workers’ union, for a WSPU march in Edinburgh in 1907. Helen Wilkie was part of the deputation that met Churchill in 1909; in 1912 she became secretary of Dundee WFL. She was also a prolific letter writer to the Dundee newspapers and a gifted orator. All her life, Annot Wilkie divided her loyalties between the Labour Party and the suffrage movement. In 1907, she moved to Manchester, joining the local branch ILP and becoming a WSPU organiser. The following year, she married Sam Robinson (1869/70–1937), a working-class clerk, party activist, propaganda secretary of the Central Manchester ILP and active supporter of the militant suffrage movement. They had two daughters but the marriage broke up within five years, following his alcoholism and violence; Annot Robinson brought up the children. In February 1908, she and other WSPU members tried to gain entry into the House of Commons hidden in a furniture van. She was sentenced to six months imprisonment but by June was back on a soap-box in Hyde Park. In 1910, she became a part-time organiser for the WLL and put forward a conference resolution condemning the Labour Party leadership for its lack of support for the women’s franchise or the WLL. She also supported liberalised and equal divorce. The following year she publicly disagreed with the League’s position on suffrage and soon afterwards moved to the NUWSS as a full-time organiser. She was active at the Midlothian by-election in September 1912. When war came, as a pacifist, she resigned from the NUWSS and helped to found the WILPF, meanwhile working on behalf of young women munitions workers. In 1917, she was part of the Women’s Peace Crusade. After the war she was employed by WILPF as an organiser and travelled in Britain, USA and Holland on its behalf, until in 1922 it could no longer afford to employ her full-time and she had to return to teaching. Back in Scotland, she taught in Newburgh, Fife. She died suddenly during an operation in Perth Royal Infirmary. Her obituarist, her friend Ellen Wilkinson, described

her as ‘a big woman and a big personality’ with ‘an exquisite sense of the ridiculous and a sharp tongue’ (The Women’s Leader 1925). imh • AGC; Collette, C. (1989) For Labour and for Women; DLabB, vol. 8 (Bibl.) (see Robinson, Annot Erskine); SS; ODNB (2004) (see Robinson, Annot Erskine); The Women’s Leader, 6 Nov. 1925 (obit.); WSM. WILLIAMS, Gertrude Alice Meredith, n. Williams, born Liverpool 19 June 1877, died Devon 3 March 1934. Sculptor. Daughter of Sarah Bland, and David Williams, MD. Gertrude Williams studied at Liverpool School of Architecture and Applied Art and then at the Académie Colarossi in Paris, where she met Morris Meredith Williams (1881–1973). They married in 1906 and settled in Edinburgh, where he was art master at Fettes College. Before the First World War, now as Alice or G. A. Meredith Williams, she exhibited small-scale work in terracotta and bronze, and designed stained glass windows for Guthrie & Wells. She later gained a reputation for architectural sculpture, mostly for memorials in civic and church settings, working regularly with the architect Sir Robert Lorimer and also with Harold Tarbolton. She designed and modelled twelve works for the Scottish National War Memorial, including the hanging, wooden figure of St Michael in the Shrine and the bas-relief bronze frieze with its sixty individual figures in different wartime roles, meticulously drawn by her husband. ‘The Spirit of the Crusaders’, which crowns Paisley War Memorial, is another striking piece. Her ecclesiastical work is in Scotland, England, Wales, the USA and Bermuda, and National Museum Wales has a scale model of ‘The Spirit of the Crusaders’. All other work is in private collections. She was made an ARBS in 1928. LAMB/PS

• NGS: Scottish Sculpture Archive: photographs of Williams’ work in RCAHMS, RA, RSA, SSA, RGIFA catalogues. Macmillan, D. (2014) Scotland’s Shrine: the Scottish National War Memorial; MSW; Shaw, P. (2016–17) ‘Alice Meredith Williams in her own words’, Scottish Society for Art History Journal, pp. 55–60, (2017) An Artist’s War: the art and letters of Morris and Alice Meredith Williams; The Scotsman, 5 March 1934 (obit.). WILLIAMSON, Euphemia (Effie), m. Dickson, born Galashiels 29 March 1846, died Innerleithen 16 May 1929. Woollen mill-worker and poet. Daughter of Agnes Milne (1815–82), poet (aka ‘Mrs Williamson’), and James Williamson, woollen slubber.

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Effie Williamson spent most of her life in the Borders, apart from eight years when her family moved to Cork. She worked as a power-loom weaver in Galashiels and, perhaps inspired by her mother’s publication of poems and essays, began to write, as she declared, amid the din of the factory. Her first poems were published in The Border Advertiser with the encouragement of John Russell, the editor. ‘Effie’ became a well-known figure in the Borders, her verses appearing in Chambers’s Journal, the People’s Friend and American and colonial periodicals. Poetry inspired by landscape was included in Edwards’s Modern Scottish Poets. She issued two volumes, The Tangled Web (1883) and Peaceable Fruits (1885), hymns and religious verse apparently read with appreciation by Gladstone. In 1889, she married a widower, woollen merchant Gavin Dickson. ls • Williamson, E., Works as above. Edwards, D. H. (1881) Modern Scottish Poets; Hall, R. (ed.) (1898) History of Galashiels.

n. Bras, born c. 1430, died Edinburgh c. Oct. 1493. Merchant. Probably daughter of Thomas Bras. Isabel Bras married the prominent Edinburgh merchant Thomas Williamson, who had a flourishing trading business with Flanders in the 1450s. she carried it on with great success after she was widowed, sometime before 1474. She specialised in the import of fine cloths and textiles, supplying the royal household through the 1470s. When John Williamson first appeared in the royal accounts in 1474, he was called ‘Isabel Williamson’s son’, reflecting his mother’s well-known reputation. Isabel Williamson continued to trade until the 1490s, often working in partnership with her son from the 1480s. Unlike most Scottish women, who kept their own surnames after marriage, she used her late husband’s surname, perhaps because of the importance of an established name and reputation in trade. Unusually for a woman, she also acquired burgess status. Isabel Williamson’s mercantile success enabled her to acquire substantial property. She used her wealth to pious ends, endowing an altar in St Giles’ Kirk in Edinburgh. On this one occasion, she used her own surname of Bras, perhaps because business was not involved. She was probably buried before the altar, having fostered a thriving family merchant ­business which would endure for several ­generations. ee WILLIAMSON, Isabel,

• ER, vols vi, ix–xi; Marshall, R. (1983) Virgins and Viragos; RMS, vol. ii; Laing, D. (ed.) (1859) Registrum Cartarum Ecclesie Sancti Egidii de Edinburgh; *ODNB (2004) (Bibl.); TA, vol. i.; T. Thomson (ed.) (1839) The Acts of the Lords of Council in Civil Causes. WILSON, Margaret, n. Bayne, baptised Greenock 22 March 1795, died Bombay 19 April 1835. Missionary and pioneer of female education in India. Daughter of Margaret Hay, and the Rev. Kenneth Bayne, Minister of the Gaelic Chapel, Greenock. Margaret Bayne received an unusually high standard of education at home, in Kilmarnock and Aberdeen, where she joined in university classes. Renowned for her learning and brilliant intellect, she was treated with unusual respect for a young woman. In 1828, she married Church of Scotland minister, John Wilson (1804–75), who had offered his services to the Scottish Missionary Society in Western India and whose own 50-year career culminated in appointment as first Vice-Chancellor of Bombay University. They had four children. Within six months of their arrival in Bombay, despite local bafflement and opposition, she had established six schools for girls of low caste or outcaste status. She later organised and opened the first female boarding school in Western India. For seven years she superintended the schools, trained teachers, visited students and parents, taught adult women to read, and was resolute in her advocacy of female education. A gifted linguist, she translated many works into Marathi. She wrote textbooks, biographies and theological reviews for Indian journals and was, according to her husband, the main attraction for visitors to the mission and the greatest support to him in his work. In the 1820s, no women were appointed as missionaries in their own right. Margaret Wilson quickly realised that any effective work undertaken with girls and women would require systematic female service and appealed for Scotswomen to dedicate themselves to such labours. She pleaded with her sisters, Anna and Hay Bayne, to join her. But she died in 1835 and her sisters instead travelled to India at their own expense to develop her pioneering initiatives, making a significant long-term impact on Indian society as well as on missionary practice. They were instrumental in establishing that women as well as men should be employed; inspired by their example, the Edinburgh Association of Ladies for the Advancement of Female Education in India was formed on 10 March 1837. lo

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WOLFF • Hewat, E. G. K. (1960) Vision and Achievement 1796–1956; ODNB (2004) (Wilson, John); Macdonald, L. A. O. (1993) ‘Margaret Bayne’ and ‘Women in Presbyterian Missions’, Dictionary of Scottish Church History and Theology (Bibl.); Wilson, J. (1838) A Memoir of Mrs Margaret Wilson of Bombay. WISHART, Sylvia,

RSA, born Stromness, Orkney 11 Feb. 1936, died Kirkwall, Orkney 4 Dec. 2008. Artist, teacher and lecturer. Daughter of Elsie Clouston, housewife, and James ‘Peerie’ Wishart, seaman. Sylvia Wishart enjoyed childhood freedom, growing up amid the colour and vitality of the harbour town of Stromness. Attending school locally, she received encouragement as an artist from Ian MacInnes (1922–2003), art teacher at Stromness Academy. Aged 17, she left school to work in the Post Office, then entered Gray’s School of Art, Aberdeen in 1956 and was awarded a postgraduate year in 1960. Following a period teaching in schools in Stornoway, Aberdeenshire and Orkney, she received an SAC grant in the mid-1960s, supporting a period of full-time painting. She returned to Gray’s in 1969 to lecture in drawing and painting, spending holidays working in Orkney. Her lyrical approach to landscape shared an affinity with the work of George MacKay Brown, and in 1969 she produced a series of drawings for his collection of essays, An Orkney Tapestry. From 1969 to 1976 she occupied the upper part of the buildings which now comprise the Pier Arts Centre in Stromness. A close friend of *Margaret Gardiner, the Centre’s founder, she served many years as a Trustee. In 1987 she returned to live permanently in Orkney and continued to work from her home, Heatherybraes, overlooking Hoy Sound, until her death. She was elected an Associate of the RSA in 1993 and an Academician in 2005. Her work is represented in many public and private collections. CD

• The Guardian, 12 Jan. 2009 (obit.); Macmillan, D. ‘Review: the art of Sylvia Wishart’, The Scotsman, 26 Jan. 2012; Pier Arts Centre (2012) Sylvia Wishart: a study (with essay by M. Gooding); The Scotsman, 26 Jan. 2012. WOLFE MURRAY, Stephanie Vivian,‡ n. Todd, born

Blandford Forum, Dorset, 27 April 1941, died Peeblesshire 24 June 2017. Publisher. Daughter of Louisa May Robins, and Haddon Todd, solicitor. Stephanie Todd’s father died during the Second World War. In 1961, after boarding school and secretarial work, she married Scottish journalist

Angus Wolfe Murray. They eventually settled in the Borders with their four sons. In 1973, the Wolfe Murrays founded Canongate Books, the first of a generation of small Scottish publishers. Her husband having moved on (he returned 35 years later), Stephanie Wolfe Murray continued the enterprise with flair, working with Charles Wild until 1979, then with other business partners, always against a background of severe financial constraint. Canongate was to become the most innovative publishing house of its time, producing significant works, including Alasdair Gray’s seminal novel Lanark (1981), a challenging work rejected by London publishers, and the bestselling account of prison life, A Sense of Freedom, by Glasgow hard man Jimmy Boyle (1977). Canongate Classics resurrected important and neglected works of Scottish literature, their books of Scottish poetry were minor masterpieces, and the Kelpies series of Scottish children’s books resurrected the genre into an art form, an immense achievement. Alexander McCall Smith has said of Stephanie Wolfe Murray: ‘Her real objective was to publish beautiful books – and she did that year after year, [. . .] creating a fine legacy for Scottish publishing.’ In the 1990s, with debts mounting, her colleague Jamie Byng bought out Canongate, and she retired from publishing, only to throw herself into work just as challenging – helping the people of Kosovo to rebuild after the civil war. Through her charity, Connect, she worked to restore houses and villages destroyed in the conflict. MDL • The Herald, 4 July 2017, Publishing Scotland, 27 June 2017, The Scotsman, 13 July 2017, Scottish Review of Books, 27 June 2017 (obits). Personal knowledge. WOLFF, Sulammith (Sula), FRCP, m. Walton, born Berlin 21 March 1924, died Edinburgh 21 Sept. 2009. Pioneering child psychiatrist. Daughter of Friedl Saloman, maker of fashionable clothes and jewellery (from whom Sula inherited her sense of style), and Walther Wolff, patent lawyer. The Wolffs, a Jewish family, fled Germany in 1933 and set up home in Hampstead, London. Sula Wolff attended South Hampstead School for Girls, where she won the top English prize, and gained entry to Oxford to read medicine. At the Maudsley Hospital, she studied child psychiatry under Sir Aubrey Lewis and met her husband, Dr Henry Walton (1924–2012). She followed him to Cape Town where they were married in 1957. They had no children. After working in South Africa and

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America, they returned to Britain in 1926. Henry became Professor of Psychiatry in Edinburgh, and Sula Wolff was appointed to the Royal Hospital for sick Children where she became senior registrar. She was made Honorary Fellow of the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Edinburgh and was a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and the Royal Society of Medicine. Sula Wolff laid the foundations of modern child psychiatry. She was among the first in her field to identify the genetic component in autistic children as well as the environmental factors which influenced their behaviour. Her seminal works such as Children Under Stress (1968) and The Life Path of Unusual Children (1995) have become classics. For all the expertise she developed, she never lost sight of the welfare of the child. Her surgery was not only lined with books: it also had a sandpit in the corner. As one of her colleagues put it: ‘She helped children to be understood, and helped parents to understand their children.’ She and her husband were art collectors of enthusiasm and distinction, who donated their priceless collection of modern art to the National Galleries of Scotland. MDL • Wolff, S., Works as above, and Childhood and Human Nature: the development of personality (1989). The Guardian, 22 Oct. 2009, The Independent, 2 Nov. 2009, The Scotsman, 11 Jan. 2010, The Times, 5 and 8 Oct. 2009 (obits); Munk’s Roll (RCP): vol. XII: Sulammith Wolff.

died Edinburgh c. 1717. Innkeeper. Lucky Wood kept an alehouse in the Canongate, being much respected for her hospitality, honesty and the neatness of her person and inn. The Canongate was the centre of the political and cultural world of Edinburgh, though its importance declined after 1707, a decline Allan Ramsay linked to the loss of the Parliament and the death of Lucky Wood. He composed an elegy in 1717, commemorating this ‘rarity’ – an ‘honest ale seller’. He praised both her good housekeeping (‘She gae’d as fait [neat] as a new Prin,/And kept her Houssie Snod and Been; . . . She was a donsy [trim] Wife and clean/without Debate.’) and her attitude toward beer (‘She ne’er gae in a Lawin fause [crooked bill], . . ./Nor kept dow’d Tip [cheap drink] within her Waa’s/but Reeming Swats [finest beer];/She never ran [sold] sour Jute, because/It gee’s the Bats’ [colic].). Although no other evidence exists, scholars now think she was a real person and that Ramsay’s comments reflect her reputation in the community. dls WOOD, Lucky,

• Chambers, R. (1868) Traditions of Edinburgh; Ramsay, A., ‘Elegy on Lucky Wood in the Canongate, May 1717’, in The Works of Allan Ramsay, 1951; for complete Ramsay poem, see: www.nls.uk/broadsides/broadside.cfm/id/15822 Private information. WOOD, Wendy (Gwendolen, Gwendoline) Emily, n. Meacham, m. Cuthbert, born Maidstone, Kent,

29 Oct. 1892, died Edinburgh 30 June 1981. Artist, broadcaster, political activist. Daughter of Florence Wood, artist, and Charles Meacham, scientific analyst. Gwen Meacham heard stories of Gaelicspeaking forebears from her mother. The family moved in 1897 to Cape Town, witnessing the Boer War (1899–1902). Her childhood was spent in South Africa, at school in Tunbridge Wells (c. 1902–6), and in a holiday house near Kirkcudbright. She attended Westminster School of Art, and evening classes run by Walter Sickert, gaining a Certificate of the Royal Drawing School (1909). Admiring Keir Hardie and ILP policies, she worked as a nursery nurse in the East End, before marrying Walter Cuthbert, shoe manufacturer, in Cape Town in 1913. They settled in Ayr near his business, and he served with the Royal Artillery (1914–18). During the war, she miscarried twins; gave birth to two daughters (Cora, 1915 and Irralee, 1918); trained as a screen actress in case of her husband’s death and started the short-lived Ayrshire Cinematographic Theatres Limited. She also suffered bouts of extreme ill-health. Demobbed, Walter Cuthbert added a studio to the house. Gwen Cuthbert resumed drawing, and published The Baby in the Glass (1923). When her husband’s investments crashed, the couple moved to Dundee, where Gwen Cuthbert became a storyteller for BBC Children’s Hour (1923), replaced ‘Auntie Cyclone’ in Glasgow, and organised Children’s Corner for the Dundee station, foreshadowing later broadcasts and TV storytelling for Jackanory (1967–74). In 1927, Dundee radio celebrity ‘Auntie Gwen’ left job, home and husband (marriage dissolved 1940), assumed the names Wendy and Wood (her mother’s name), and started a new, militant life in Edinburgh. Having joined the Scottish League (1916) and Home Rule Association (1918), she enlisted with the Scottish National Movement (1927) and the National Party of Scotland (1928). She helped folklorist Lewis Spence to win North Midlothian for the Nationalists (1929); he prefaced her travelogue The Secret of Spey (1930). When she

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replaced a Union Flag with the Lion Rampant at Stirling Castle on a Bannockburn Day rally (1932), she was accused of discrediting the cause. She protested against the Blackshirts in Edinburgh (1937) and against conditions for women in Scottish jails (1930, 1951); she threw a stone in order to be arrested and experience ‘inside’ for herself, but was never charged or convicted, though her ‘prison record’ almost spoiled a USA visit (1947). Hanging an effigy of the Secretary of State in Glasgow (1950), unrolling a Home Rule banner at the Highland Games (1950) and, most dramatically, going on hunger strike (1972) to press the Secretary of State for a Green Paper on a Scottish Assembly, Wood used direct action repeatedly to gain media attention. But she opposed violence against people, condemned conscription and was vice-chair of the Edinburgh Peace Council. An unsuccessful candidate locally (Edinburgh 1935) and in the general election (Bridgeton 1945), Wendy Wood founded the Scottish Patriots in August 1949. In London, Gwen Meacham had met artists and writers. In Ayr, she knew *Jessie King and her husband. In Edinburgh, she befriended *Helen Cruickshank, Hugh MacDiarmid, Lewis Spence and Compton Mackenzie at PEN meetings hosted by William Burn Murdoch, who painted her portrait. She wrote articles for many publications and organisations. After 1939, with Oulith MacAndreis (Oliver MacAndrew), an editor of Smeddum and The Lion Rampant, she lived at Allt Rhuig: her articles on crofting were collected into the book, Mac’s Croft (1946). Wendy Wood left MacAndreis, who admitted he was married and in the IRA, moving to a croft at Resipol. Her hillwalks are described in Moidart and Morar (1950) and she co-edited The Strontian Magazine. The Patriot first appeared 1953 and continues today. From 1956 to 1966, she shared a home with Florence St John Cadell (joint exhibition 1963). Unfounded accusations of spying at Allt Rhuig and of causing the theft of the Stone of Scone were easily made against a woman who courted controversy. The Church of Scotland, however, respected her insistence on a legal argument for Home Rule: she was the first woman to address the General Assembly (May 1961) since *Lady Aberdeen in 1921. Compton Mackenzie, first president of the Scottish Patriots, praised Wendy Wood’s integrity, dedicating his book On Moral Courage (1960) to her. She did not live to see the Scottish Parliament. ra

• Cuthbert, G. (1923) The Baby in the Glass and Other Verses, (1927) The Chickabiddies Book, (1924–7) Little Dots, (1935) with King, E. M., A Lad of Dundee ; Wood, W. (1930) The Secret of Spey, (1938) I like Life, (1946) Mac’s Croft, (1950) Moidart and Morar, (1952) From a Highland Croft, (1952) Tales of the Western Isles, (1953) Let’s see Mallaig, (1955) People of the Glen, (1970) Yours Sincerely for Scotland, (1973) Legends of the Borders, (1980) The Silver Chanter, (1980) Astronauts and Tinklers: Poems, J. Hendry, ed. Cuthbert, C. (1999) Wendy Wood 1892–1981: a selection of European Drawings [. . .] Hanover Fine Arts (catalogue) and (1999) Wendy Wood, Illustrator ; ODNB (2004) (see Meacham, Gwendoline Emily). Private information. WOOD ALLEN, Janet (Jenny) n. Soutar, MBE, Hon. MA. Born Dundee 20 Nov. 1911, died Dundee 30 Dec. 2010. Cyclist, toastmistress, Councillor, JP, marathon runner. Daughter of Margaret Kinnear, and James Soutar, chauffeur. One of six children, family circumstances meant Jenny Soutar could not take up her scholarship to Harris Academy but left school at 14 to work in a shop. In her twenties she took up cycling and joined a men’s club. She became Scottish women’s champion time triallist. In 1938 she married Roy Allen; they had three sons. As Conservative councillor for West Ferry for fourteen years, Jenny Wood Allen, also an early and accomplished toastmistress, championed women’s rights and education. She was appointed JP in 1966. In 1983 she helped organise Dundee’s first marathon, and casually asked if she was too old to run. Despite being advised against it, she trained and ran, finishing in 5 hours 34 minutes. She ran over 50 full marathons, winning many records and awards, including Honorary MA (1994), and MBE (2004). She entered The Guinness Book of Records at 90 (running despite a head injury) as the oldest female marathon finisher ever – a record lasting until 2010. After that she undertook shorter runs and walks, inspiring other women and raising over £40,000 for charity. Widowed in 1991 she lived alone, but had many friends. She said: ‘I have done my best in the race. I have finished the course and kept the faith.’ IMH

• Dundee Evening Telegraph, 22 March 2001; DWT; Halifax Evening Courier, 3 Jan. 2011 (obit.); Times Educational Supplement Connect, 30 May 2003; The Herald, 10 Jan. 2011, The Scotsman, 29 Jan. 2011, Dundee Courier 31 Dec 2010 (obits); www.dundeeroadrunners.co.uk/the-club/runner-smemories/142-jenny-wood-allen Private information.

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WORMALD WORMALD, Jennifer Mary (Jenny),‡ n. Tannahill, m1 Brown, m2 Wormald born Glasgow 18 Jan. 1942,

WRIGHT, Bessie, fl. 1611–28. Healer, Scone parish, Perthshire. Very little of Bessie Wright’s early life is known, but from information in the church records when she was investigated for witchcraft in 1611, 1626 and 1628, she appears to have had a long and mostly successful career as a healer or charmer, both in Perth and the surrounding area. She used herbs, including hyssop, finkle (fennel) and ribble grass (ribwort), and rituals to cure or help childbirth, gravel, liver complaints and migraines. An interesting and unusual feature of her healing knowledge and skill was her possession of what she called her ‘medical book’. She claimed it was 1,000 years old and had been used by her father and grandfather. Bessie Wright said she could not read from the book, but her son, Adam Bell, read out extracts for her. It is not clear whether this book was a medieval medical textbook, perhaps written in Latin, or a pre-Reformation religious tract, but her ownership of it was unacceptable to the church. In 1611, Mr William Cowper, minister of Perth, ordered her to hand it over. In 1626, she was investigated for using unacceptable healing rituals and was ordered to stop offering any healing advice within the burgh of Perth. She does not seem to have obeyed this ruling as she was in trouble again two years later. This time she was imprisoned. Her family complained about her treatment and she was released, although her son had to pay £1,000 bail. It is unclear from the presbytery records whether she was ever officially tried and, if so, what the outcome was. Although the church used the Witchcraft Act of 1563 to justify its investigation of Bessie Wright for witchcraft, she was not accused of demonic witchcraft or malefice (evil harm). The main reasons for the accusations against her were failed healing rituals or resentment, as one of the witnesses complained that she had spoiled his ale and, although it is not certain, the lack of any references to the devil or demonic pact may have saved her from execution. jhmm

• Wormald, J. Work as above and (1980) ‘Bloodfeud, kindred and government in early modern Scotland’ Past and Present 87; (1985) Lords and Men in Scotland: bonds of manrent, 1442–1625; (1981, 1991) Court, Kirk and Community: Scotland, 1470–1625. Boardman, S. and Goodare, J. (eds) (2014) Kings, Lords and Men in Scotland and Britain, 1300–1625: essays in honour of Jenny Wormald; Reid-Baxter, J. (2016) ‘In memoriam: Jenny Wormald (1942–2015)’ (Bibl.) Innes Review 67; The Guardian, 29 Jan. 2016 (obit.).

• NRS: CH2/299/2, Perth Presbytery Records. RPC, 2nd series, vol. 2, pp. 623–4.

died Edinburgh 9 Dec. 2015. Scottish historian and teacher. Adopted daughter of Margaret Dunlop, and Dr Thomas Tannahill, general practitioner. Jenny Tannahill was educated at Glasgow High School and took her first degree at the University of Glasgow (1959–63) before undertaking doctoral research on bonds of manrent in medieval Scotland. She lectured in Scottish history at the University of Glasgow 1968–86, subsequently moving to St Hilda’s College, University of Oxford. Alongside Scottish history, Jenny Wormald taught Oxford’s modern history curriculum and was her college’s Fellow Librarian and Senior Tutor. On retirement in 2005 she continued to teach Scottish history and literature as Honorary Fellow in History at the University of Edinburgh. During her career she brought up three children from her two marriages. Within her own generation, Jenny Wormald was one of the most significant figures in Scottish history, with a profound influence upon subsequent scholarly generations. Her detailed research on bonds, blood feuds and peace-making led to a broad reinterpretation of the way monarchs, nobility and society interacted in Scotland during the 15th to 17th centuries. While championing the achievements of the Stewart dynasty, her book, Mary, Queen of Scots: a study in failure (1988, rev. 2001), debunked the myth of this Queen as a romantic martyr. She was particularly adept at challenging accepted theories and forcing her readers and students to reconsider. Her love of debate made her a stimulating teacher and a brilliant, provocative thinker and writer who rarely refused an invitation to speak to audiences small or large. Her willingness to update her views sprang from her joy at delving into historical evidence, debating new perspectives and delivering an accessible, but rigorous, understanding of Scotland’s past. In 2017 a Junior Research Fellowship at St Hilda’s was named in her honour. JEAD

born Glasgow 19 April 1844, died Edinburgh 24 Feb. 1907. Principal founder of the Edinburgh School of Cookery (now Queen Margaret University). Daughter of Christian Edington, and Harry Guthrie Wright, manager, Glasgow and SouthWestern Railway Company.

WRIGHT, Christian Edington Guthrie,

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After Christian Guthrie Wright’s mother died in childbirth, she and her father moved to Edinburgh in the 1860s. Educated at boarding school, she attended extra-mural classes at the University of Edinburgh. She was a founder member of the Ladies’ Edinburgh Debating Society (see Mair, Sarah) and treasurer of the Edinburgh Association for the University Education of Women. In 1875 she took the lead in creating the Edinburgh School of Cookery, following methods advocated by the National Union for Improving the Education of Women of all Classes. The Union’s president, *Princess Louise (see Louise, Princess), became the school’s principal patron. Over 1,000 women attended the inaugural lecture on 9 November in the new Museum of Science and Art. The School developed rapidly, with Miss Guthrie Wright, as she was known, as honorary secretary, providing drive and enthusiasm. Lectures on cooking and household health were delivered as regular series, in Edinburgh as well as on a peripatetic basis all over Britain. Similar institutions were encouraged by Miss Guthrie Wright and her colleagues (notably Louisa Stevenson, see Stevenson, Flora) in Glasgow, Dundee and England, including a Manchester branch. In 1879, with Sir Thomas Dyke Acland and two medical advisers, Christian Guthrie Wright published an influential School Cookery Book in the series Science Primers, edited by T. H. Huxley. This book probably represented the best state of food knowledge at the time. In 1891, the Edinburgh School was established in Atholl Crescent, subsidising work for lower-income groups from its fee-paying courses. Christian Guthrie Wright took only an organising role and never taught, since she wished to remain on the social level of her patrons. As a successful fund-raiser, she helped found the Queen Victoria’s Jubilee Institute for Nurses (1887), becoming treasurer of the Scottish council. Her determination to introduce cookery into the School Board schools’ curriculum faced opposition both from men who objected to the cost, and some women who did not wish to have girls study ‘female’ subjects. But the SED was sympathetic to her view that all girls should receive domestic science instruction, and after her sudden death, took responsibility for the Edinburgh School, renamed as the Edinburgh College of Domestic Science. Her successor as ‘superintendent’, and later principal, was Ethel De la Cour (1869–1957), who negotiated with the SED over the 1908 Education (Scotland) Act. Formal qualification for domestic

science teachers was introduced, and output of trained DS staff soon trebled. During the First World War, Ethel De La Cour took part in food conservation campaigns, and was a member of committees on rationing and training, both the subject of College courses. Appointed MBE (1920) and OBE (1929), she was one of the first women JPs in Edinburgh, founding president of the city’s Soroptimist Club (1927–30), and a member of the National Council of Women. TB • Queen Margaret University Archives. Baly, M. E. (1987) A History of the Queen’s Nursing Institute; Begg, T. (1994) The Excellent Women: the origins and history of Queen Margaret College; (Edinburgh) Evening News, 8 June 1955; Edinburgh School of Cookery Magazine, 1929, 2/32, pp. 5–6 and 1930, 2/34, pp. 6–7; Mair, S. E. S. (1925) ‘An appreciation of Christian Edington Guthrie Wright’, Edinburgh School of Cookery Magazine, April; *ODNB (2004) (see Guthrie Wright, Christian; De La Cour, Ethel); Rae, L. M. (1936) Ladies in Debate; The Scotsman, 1 March, 1907 (obit. Wright), 27 April 1957 (obit. De La Cour); SB. WRIGHT, Frances (Fanny),‡ m. Phiquepal d’Arusmont, born Dundee 6 Sept. 1795, died

Cincinnati, Ohio 13 Dec. 1852. Utopian socialist, feminist, freethinker. Daughter of Camilla Campbell, and James Wright, radical Dundee merchant. Both parents having died in 1798, Fanny and her sister Camilla Wright (1797–1831), after childhood in London and Devon, stayed with their great-uncle James Mylne, Professor of Moral Philosophy at Glasgow, and his wife Agnes Millar. Fanny Wright educated herself in the university library, writing a treatise on an imagined female disciple of Epicurus, A Few Days in Athens (1822), and several plays, including Altorf (1819). Through the influence of sisters Robina Millar and *Margaret Cullen, she was attracted by the example of the American republic. In 1818, she and Camilla travelled there: in February 1819 Altorf was staged on Broadway. On her return, she published her letters to Robina Millar as Views of Society and Manners in America (1821), greeted with enthusiasm by The Scotsman, but viewed by the Quarterly Review as a ‘ridiculous and extravagant panegyric on the government and people of the United States’ (Eckhardt 1984, pp. 47–8). Fanny Wright criticised the republic only for the institution of slavery, and, to a lesser extent, its treatment of women. In Paris in 1821, she met the Marquis de Lafayette, veteran of the American and French Revolutions, to whom she became devoted. With Camilla, she returned

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to the USA to join him in 1824, and was further inspired by Robert Owen’s new community at New Harmony, Indiana. At Nashoba, Tennessee, from 1825, she planned first a model farm, of which both she and Camilla were resident trustees, based on the labour of purchased black slaves, then a utopian community, following Owen’s ideas. Though initially successful, in July 1827 Nashoba received unwelcome publicity about inter-racial sex, suggesting this was approved by the Wright sisters. Back in Europe, Fanny Wright met the ensuing storm of disapproval by publicly justifying a co-operative, biracial community of equals, and condemning oppressive laws on marriage and attitudes to miscegenation. Returning in December 1827, she found Nashoba failing economically and in its ideals and Camilla newly married. Fanny Wright joined Owen’s son, Robert Dale Owen, in New Harmony, becoming joint editor of the New Harmony Gazette (later Free Enquirer). Unprecedentedly, she also began to lecture to large mixed audiences across the US on anti-slavery and co-operation, free thought and marriage reform. Opponents labelled her ‘the Red Harlot of Infidelity’ (Eckhardt 1984, p. 3). In 1829 the Wright sisters and Robert Dale Owen moved to New York, drawn by the situation of urban artisans and the New York Working Men’s Party. Having taken her freed slaves to Haiti, accompanied by a former Nashoba settler, William Phiquepal (b. 1811), Fanny Wright became pregnant with his child, and returned to France in June 1830. Camilla followed, but died in Paris in childbirth in February 1831. Fanny married

Phiquepal in 1831, after the birth of her daughter Sylva. Her later years were spent in poverty in France and the USA, often separated from husband and daughter, writing her autobiography and her major work, England the Civiliser (1848). In 1844 she inherited property in Dundee, but her husband’s financial demands led to a divorce suit, estrangement from her daughter, and legal conflict until her death in 1852. Fanny Wright’s portrait became the frontispiece of the six-volume History of Woman Suffrage in a sincere tribute to ‘the first woman who gave lectures on political subjects in America’ and spoke ‘on the equality of the sexes’ (Stanton et al., 1881, I, pp. 35, 691–2; II, 429; III, 293). JR • Cornell Univ., Ithaca: transcripts by T. Wolfson of some of Frances Wright’s papers (now lost); National Union Catalog of MSS: list of surviving papers in the USA. Wright, F., Works as above, and (1972) Life, Letters, and Lectures, 1834/1844. Baker, P. (1963) ‘Introduction’ to Wright, F. Views of Society and Manners in America; Bederman, G. (2005) ‘Revisiting Nashoba: slavery, utopia, and Frances Wright in America, 1818–1826’, American Literary History 17, 3; DWT; Eckhardt, C. M. (1984) Fanny Wright: rebel in America; Heineman, H. (1983) Restless Angels: the friendship of six Victorian women; Kolmerten, C. A. (1990) Women in Utopia: the ideology of gender in the American Owenite communities; ODNB (2004); Rendall, J. (2014) ‘A transnational career? The republican and utopian politics of Frances Wright’ in O. Janz and D. Schönpflug (eds) Gender History in a Transnational Perspective: networks, biographies, gender orders; Stanton, E. C., Anthony, S. B. and Gage, M. J. (eds) (1881) History of Woman Suffrage, 6 vols.

Y YOUNG, Issobell, born parish of Dunbar c. 1565, died Edinburgh, Feb. 1629. Indicted for witchcraft. Wife of tenant-farmer. Issobell Young was first accused of witchcraft on 8 January 1619 and eventually tried in February 1629, when she was at least 65 years old. Her husband George Smith, a portioner of East Barns, Dunbar, testified against her. Three of their four married sons testified for her. References to Issobell Young’s work scattered through the abundant surviving documents make it possible to sketch her life before her trial. The

family had a secure and heritable lease to one portion of the lands and village of East Barns, Dunbar, for most of her adult life. She and George Smith held the smallest of the three portions, and fought to increase their social status. They owned livestock, barns and outbuildings and employed about ten servants. In addition to managing a household of around 15 permanent members, which probably increased during planting and harvest, Issobell Young took crops to the mill, bought and sold goods and produce, and cared for animals. She undoubtedly also raised her c­ hildren, 466

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to the USA to join him in 1824, and was further inspired by Robert Owen’s new community at New Harmony, Indiana. At Nashoba, Tennessee, from 1825, she planned first a model farm, of which both she and Camilla were resident trustees, based on the labour of purchased black slaves, then a utopian community, following Owen’s ideas. Though initially successful, in July 1827 Nashoba received unwelcome publicity about inter-racial sex, suggesting this was approved by the Wright sisters. Back in Europe, Fanny Wright met the ensuing storm of disapproval by publicly justifying a co-operative, biracial community of equals, and condemning oppressive laws on marriage and attitudes to miscegenation. Returning in December 1827, she found Nashoba failing economically and in its ideals and Camilla newly married. Fanny Wright joined Owen’s son, Robert Dale Owen, in New Harmony, becoming joint editor of the New Harmony Gazette (later Free Enquirer). Unprecedentedly, she also began to lecture to large mixed audiences across the US on anti-slavery and co-operation, free thought and marriage reform. Opponents labelled her ‘the Red Harlot of Infidelity’ (Eckhardt 1984, p. 3). In 1829 the Wright sisters and Robert Dale Owen moved to New York, drawn by the situation of urban artisans and the New York Working Men’s Party. Having taken her freed slaves to Haiti, accompanied by a former Nashoba settler, William Phiquepal (b. 1811), Fanny Wright became pregnant with his child, and returned to France in June 1830. Camilla followed, but died in Paris in childbirth in February 1831. Fanny married

Phiquepal in 1831, after the birth of her daughter Sylva. Her later years were spent in poverty in France and the USA, often separated from husband and daughter, writing her autobiography and her major work, England the Civiliser (1848). In 1844 she inherited property in Dundee, but her husband’s financial demands led to a divorce suit, estrangement from her daughter, and legal conflict until her death in 1852. Fanny Wright’s portrait became the frontispiece of the six-volume History of Woman Suffrage in a sincere tribute to ‘the first woman who gave lectures on political subjects in America’ and spoke ‘on the equality of the sexes’ (Stanton et al., 1881, I, pp. 35, 691–2; II, 429; III, 293). JR • Cornell Univ., Ithaca: transcripts by T. Wolfson of some of Frances Wright’s papers (now lost); National Union Catalog of MSS: list of surviving papers in the USA. Wright, F., Works as above, and (1972) Life, Letters, and Lectures, 1834/1844. Baker, P. (1963) ‘Introduction’ to Wright, F. Views of Society and Manners in America; Bederman, G. (2005) ‘Revisiting Nashoba: slavery, utopia, and Frances Wright in America, 1818–1826’, American Literary History 17, 3; DWT; Eckhardt, C. M. (1984) Fanny Wright: rebel in America; Heineman, H. (1983) Restless Angels: the friendship of six Victorian women; Kolmerten, C. A. (1990) Women in Utopia: the ideology of gender in the American Owenite communities; ODNB (2004); Rendall, J. (2014) ‘A transnational career? The republican and utopian politics of Frances Wright’ in O. Janz and D. Schönpflug (eds) Gender History in a Transnational Perspective: networks, biographies, gender orders; Stanton, E. C., Anthony, S. B. and Gage, M. J. (eds) (1881) History of Woman Suffrage, 6 vols.

Y YOUNG, Issobell, born parish of Dunbar c. 1565, died Edinburgh, Feb. 1629. Indicted for witchcraft. Wife of tenant-farmer. Issobell Young was first accused of witchcraft on 8 January 1619 and eventually tried in February 1629, when she was at least 65 years old. Her husband George Smith, a portioner of East Barns, Dunbar, testified against her. Three of their four married sons testified for her. References to Issobell Young’s work scattered through the abundant surviving documents make it possible to sketch her life before her trial. The

family had a secure and heritable lease to one portion of the lands and village of East Barns, Dunbar, for most of her adult life. She and George Smith held the smallest of the three portions, and fought to increase their social status. They owned livestock, barns and outbuildings and employed about ten servants. In addition to managing a household of around 15 permanent members, which probably increased during planting and harvest, Issobell Young took crops to the mill, bought and sold goods and produce, and cared for animals. She undoubtedly also raised her c­ hildren, 466

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cooked, cleaned, mended, and gathered peat, wood and water. Witness testimony suggests that although in control of her life, Issobell Young was not happy with her economic and social position. Her neighbours believed that she used harmful magic to damage the profitability of their households as a strategy to advance her own. Neighbours recalled patterns of verbal and sometimes physical aggression. A jury of their peers believed them. Issobell Young’s testimony provides a rare insight into how an early modern woman saw herself. She rejected the connection between her speech and behaviour and her neighbours’ misfortunes. Rather than denying her quarrels, as some witchcraft suspects did, she justified them, describing her reactions to her neighbours as normal. She described her words as ‘ordinarlie blastis of anger’, or the ‘bragis [threats] of passionat wemen’ (Selected Justiciary Cases, pp. 101, 104). She called herself an ‘honest woman’ (NRS, JC26/9), and said her neighbours’ misfortunes were due to their own immorality, God’s judgement, or their own laziness and incompetence. She became the persecuted, honest, good Christian wife and neighbour. Her self-presented image only partially failed. She was acquitted on ten of the charges and only on one charge was unanimously found guilty. After her trial she was taken to Castle Hill, Edinburgh, tied to a stake, strangled and burned. lm • NRS: JC26/9 ‘Issobell Young’ bundle, document 4. Larner, C. (1981) Enemies of God: the witch-hunt in Scotland; Martin, L. (2013) ‘The witch, the household and the community: Isobel Young in East Barns, 1580–1629’ in J. Goodare (ed.) Scottish Witches and Witch-Hunters, (2002) ‘Witchcraft and family: what can witchcraft documents tell us about early modern Scottish family life?’, Scottish Tradition 27; Smith, J. (ed.) (1914) Selected Justiciary Cases, vol. 1, pp. 96–120; Survey of Scottish Witchcraft, www.arts.ed.ac. uk/witches.

born Dumfries 15 June 1952, died Edinburgh 5 July 1996. Pioneer of Fair Trade movement in the UK. Daughter of Daisy Kerr, nurse, and Robert Young, agricultural contractor. Educated in Dumfriesshire, where she met her future husband Iain Black, Lorna Young studied as a youth and community worker at Moray House, but, disenchanted with the course, left to train in bookselling. Motivated by her strong sense of social justice, she joined Campaign Coffee Scotland (later Equal Exchange) in 1989, before becoming in 1991 the first sales director of Cafédirect. In the busi-

YOUNG, Lorna,

ness world the concept of fair trade – ­representing not an act of charity but a viable business ­proposition – was regarded with puzzlement and occasional hostility by retailers, but Lorna Young was able to persuade one large supermarket chain to stock this product, eventually bringing other major supermarkets into the fold and increasing the market share for fair trade coffee producers. Born with a serious heart condition, Lorna Young underwent three heart-valve transplant operations, but died suddenly in 1996. At her funeral, many telegrams were read from farmers in Central America testifying to her pioneering work, which continues through the Lorna Young Foundation. ICG • NLS: Lorna Young papers. The Guardian, 19 July 1996, The Herald, 18 July 1996, The Independent, 2 Aug. 1996, The Scotsman, 18 July 1996 (obits). Lorna Young Foundation: www.lyf.org.uk Scottish Free Trade Forum, ‘Can Scotland call itself a Fair Trade Nation?’, report, Nov. 2012, at www. scottishfairtradeforum.org.uk/newsroom/publications. Personal knowledge; private information: Iain Black, Daisy Young, Robert Young.

born Aberdeen 5 June 1883, died Ravensbrück, Germany, 14 March 1945. Nurse and resistance worker, France. Daughter of Elizabeth Ann Burnett, and Alexander Young, grocer’s clerk. The youngest of three children, Mary Young moved to Edinburgh with her family in 1884, after her mother’s death. After school, she spent several years as a dressmaker in Jenners’ department store, before training as a nurse at Kingston County Hospital, Surrey. In 1909, after qualification, she went to France as a private nurse. When war was declared in 1914, Mary Young volunteered for service with the Allied forces, working in the British Army zone in France. After the war she resumed private nursing in Paris, but returned regularly to Scotland and sent her sister money to help maintain the Aberdeen house where she intended to retire. She worked on in Paris during the Second World War, even after the Germans occupied the city. In December 1940, she was sent to a civilian internment camp in Besançon, but due to ill health was soon released. Back in Paris, although under Gestapo surveillance, she managed to harbour resistance organisers sent from London and provide a base for radio transmissions. The Gestapo arrested her late in 1943, on suspicion of helping British prisoners to escape, and she was sent as a political YOUNG, Mary Helen,

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prisoner to the women’s concentration camp at Ravensbrück. Small (4ft 11in), now aged 60, and already ill with heart trouble, she could not do the heavy work required of camp inmates, and conditions at Ravensbrück took their toll. Like thousands of her fellow prisoners, she perished. When news of Mary Young’s resistance work and death reached Scotland in September 1945, newspapers hailed her as a second Edith Cavell. Preliminary investigations revealed that she had died in early 1945, possibly in the gas chamber; in 1948, the Court of Session adjudged that she

had died on 14 March 1945. Letters produced in evidence referred to her courage and cheerfulness. A fellow inmate said ‘she always kept her chin up’. frw • NRS: CS 46/1948 Feb 55, Court of Session unextracted process; SC70/1/1123 pp. 552–7, Edinburgh Sheriff Court Commissary Court records. *ODNB (2004); ‘Nazis send Aberdeen heroine to gas chamber’, The Press and Journal, 27 Sept. 1945; ‘Marie Helene Sends her Love’, The Press and Journal, 27 Sept. 1945; ‘Nazis murdered nurse for aiding French’, The Press and Journal, 31 Jan. 1948.

Z m. Wiltshire, born‡ Greenock 4 Nov. 1963, died Cardiff 2 Oct. 1999. Pop singer. Daughter of Hilda Jordan and Victor Zavaroni, fish and chip shop owners. Born into a musical family in Rothesay, Lena Zavaroni found fame at the age of nine, when she appeared on the television talent show Opportunity Knocks. She won the contest for a record five consecutive weeks, and the song she sang, ‘Ma, He’s Making Eyes at Me’, reached number 8 in the charts. Having moved to London and the Italian Conti Stage School, in the mid-1970s she went from one high-profile performance to another, taking part in a Hollywood charity performance with Frank Sinatra and Lucille Ball and singing at the White House for President Gerald Ford. She appeared on Morecambe and Wise, and took part in the Royal Variety Performance. At the Conti she met another child star, Bonnie Langford, and together they had a television show, Lena and Bonnie. But the fame and wealth which had transformed her life quickly had another side to it. By the age of 16 she had been diagnosed with anorexia nervosa, and for the next 20 years she moved between periods of performing and periods of serious illness. She married businessman Peter Wiltshire in 1989, but the marriage lasted only 18 months. Lena Zavaroni attended different clinics for anorexia and depression, and was further affected by personal and family troubles. In September 1999, she underwent a rare type of brain operation known as a capsulotomy at the University Hospital of Wales, Cardiff. By then she was living on social security benefits in a council ZAVARONI, Lena Hilda,

flat in Hertfordshire. She died, aged 35, of a chest infection contracted after the operation. fj • The Daily Telegraph, 3 Oct. 1999 (obit.) and 9 Dec. 1999; The Guardian, 5 Oct. 1999 (obit.); ODNB (2004). www.lena-zavaroni.co.uk

m. Johnstone, born Kilcreggan, Dunbartonshire, 31 July 1898, died Badingham, Suffolk, 3 Jan. 1991; ZINKEISEN, Anna Katrina, m. Heseltine, born Kilcreggan 29 August 1901, died London 23 Sept. 1976. Daughters of Welsh-born Clare Bolton-Charles, and Victor Zinkeisen, Glasgow timber merchant and amateur artist. Tutored at home, ‘both sisters wanted to draw and paint to the exclusion of all other academic pursuits’ (Walpole 1978, p. 7). In 1909, the family moved to Pinner, Middlesex, where Doris and Anna Zinkeisen attended the Harrow School of Art. In 1917, they won scholarships to the Royal Academy Schools. Referred to as ‘Big Zink’ and ‘Little Zink’, they had eminent teachers, including Sir William Orpen and Sir George Clausen. Doris Zinkeisen received Paris Salon medals: Bronze (1929), Silver (1930) and Gold (1934); Anna Zinkeisen, who also studied sculpture, won a Silver Medal at the 1925 Exposition des Arts Décoratifs. In 1927, Doris Zinkeisen married Captain Grahame Johnstone (d. 1946); they had three children. The following year, her sister married Captain Guy Heseltine (d. 1967) and they had one daughter. Painting in the academic-realist style, the Zinkeisens gained popularity as official and society portraitists; examples include Elsa Lanchester ZINKEISEN, Doris Clare,

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prisoner to the women’s concentration camp at Ravensbrück. Small (4ft 11in), now aged 60, and already ill with heart trouble, she could not do the heavy work required of camp inmates, and conditions at Ravensbrück took their toll. Like thousands of her fellow prisoners, she perished. When news of Mary Young’s resistance work and death reached Scotland in September 1945, newspapers hailed her as a second Edith Cavell. Preliminary investigations revealed that she had died in early 1945, possibly in the gas chamber; in 1948, the Court of Session adjudged that she

had died on 14 March 1945. Letters produced in evidence referred to her courage and cheerfulness. A fellow inmate said ‘she always kept her chin up’. frw • NRS: CS 46/1948 Feb 55, Court of Session unextracted process; SC70/1/1123 pp. 552–7, Edinburgh Sheriff Court Commissary Court records. *ODNB (2004); ‘Nazis send Aberdeen heroine to gas chamber’, The Press and Journal, 27 Sept. 1945; ‘Marie Helene Sends her Love’, The Press and Journal, 27 Sept. 1945; ‘Nazis murdered nurse for aiding French’, The Press and Journal, 31 Jan. 1948.

Z m. Wiltshire, born‡ Greenock 4 Nov. 1963, died Cardiff 2 Oct. 1999. Pop singer. Daughter of Hilda Jordan and Victor Zavaroni, fish and chip shop owners. Born into a musical family in Rothesay, Lena Zavaroni found fame at the age of nine, when she appeared on the television talent show Opportunity Knocks. She won the contest for a record five consecutive weeks, and the song she sang, ‘Ma, He’s Making Eyes at Me’, reached number 8 in the charts. Having moved to London and the Italian Conti Stage School, in the mid-1970s she went from one high-profile performance to another, taking part in a Hollywood charity performance with Frank Sinatra and Lucille Ball and singing at the White House for President Gerald Ford. She appeared on Morecambe and Wise, and took part in the Royal Variety Performance. At the Conti she met another child star, Bonnie Langford, and together they had a television show, Lena and Bonnie. But the fame and wealth which had transformed her life quickly had another side to it. By the age of 16 she had been diagnosed with anorexia nervosa, and for the next 20 years she moved between periods of performing and periods of serious illness. She married businessman Peter Wiltshire in 1989, but the marriage lasted only 18 months. Lena Zavaroni attended different clinics for anorexia and depression, and was further affected by personal and family troubles. In September 1999, she underwent a rare type of brain operation known as a capsulotomy at the University Hospital of Wales, Cardiff. By then she was living on social security benefits in a council ZAVARONI, Lena Hilda,

flat in Hertfordshire. She died, aged 35, of a chest infection contracted after the operation. fj • The Daily Telegraph, 3 Oct. 1999 (obit.) and 9 Dec. 1999; The Guardian, 5 Oct. 1999 (obit.); ODNB (2004). www.lena-zavaroni.co.uk

m. Johnstone, born Kilcreggan, Dunbartonshire, 31 July 1898, died Badingham, Suffolk, 3 Jan. 1991; ZINKEISEN, Anna Katrina, m. Heseltine, born Kilcreggan 29 August 1901, died London 23 Sept. 1976. Daughters of Welsh-born Clare Bolton-Charles, and Victor Zinkeisen, Glasgow timber merchant and amateur artist. Tutored at home, ‘both sisters wanted to draw and paint to the exclusion of all other academic pursuits’ (Walpole 1978, p. 7). In 1909, the family moved to Pinner, Middlesex, where Doris and Anna Zinkeisen attended the Harrow School of Art. In 1917, they won scholarships to the Royal Academy Schools. Referred to as ‘Big Zink’ and ‘Little Zink’, they had eminent teachers, including Sir William Orpen and Sir George Clausen. Doris Zinkeisen received Paris Salon medals: Bronze (1929), Silver (1930) and Gold (1934); Anna Zinkeisen, who also studied sculpture, won a Silver Medal at the 1925 Exposition des Arts Décoratifs. In 1927, Doris Zinkeisen married Captain Grahame Johnstone (d. 1946); they had three children. The following year, her sister married Captain Guy Heseltine (d. 1967) and they had one daughter. Painting in the academic-realist style, the Zinkeisens gained popularity as official and society portraitists; examples include Elsa Lanchester ZINKEISEN, Doris Clare,

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(1925) by Doris, and surgeon Sir Archibald McIndoe (c. 1940) by Anna (both NPG, London). While portraiture was the mainstay of both careers, the sisters, as accomplished horsewomen, also favoured equestrian subjects, and they worked widely in other visual media, e.g. advertising posters for the London Underground Company and murals for Cunard liner RMS Queen Mary. Doris Zinkeisen additionally established a successful career as stage and costume designer for plays and films (e.g. for Nigel Playfair, Charles Cochran and Herbert Wilcox), and wrote a key book, Designing for the Stage (1938). Anna Zinkeisen had a prominent reputation as an illustrator of books and magazine covers. In 1940, she was granted the title Royal Designer for Industry. During the Second World War, both sisters enrolled as auxiliary nurses in the Casualty Department at St Mary’s Hospital, London. In 1941, they were employed as war artists for St John’s Ambulance Brigade. Anna Zinkeisen’s contribution includes Archibald McIndoe Operating at East Grinstead (1944, IWM, London). As a ‘medical artist’, she

worked with McIndoe and Alexander Fleming, providing pathological drawings of traumatised tissue, later used in the textbook Essentials of Modern Surgery (1948). In 1945, Doris Zinkeisen was sent to Germany where she depicted the Belsen concentration camp in Belsen and Human Laundry, Belsen (1945, both IWM). From the mid1920s onward, the Zinkeisen sisters were familiar figures on London’s artistic scene and in art galleries nationwide, including the RA, RHA and RSA. Remarkably versatile artists, their professional careers were in many ways exceptional. bcd • NPG London Archive: Artists’ files; IWM London: War Artists’ Archive; London Transport Museum Archive: Artists’ files; Theatre Museum Archive, London: Artists’ files. Zinkeisen, Doris [1938] (1945) Designing for the Stage. Green, O. (2001) Underground Art: London Transport posters 1908 to the present ; Hinkey, D. M. (1994) The Art of the RMS Queen Mary; ODNB (2004) (Zinkeisen, Anna); Rideal, L. (2002) Mirror, Mirror, self-portraits by women artists; The Times, 11 Jan. 1991 (Zinkeisen, Doris) (obit.); Walpole, J. (1978) ‘Anna’ A memorial tribute to Anna Zinkeisen. Private information.

469

Thematic Index The names of subjects have been reduced to the minimum necessary for identification, using the names by which ­subjects are best known. Names in italics are co-subjects (see the explanation in the Readers’ Guide on page xxvii).

Aid (see also Development) Farquharson, Marjorie (1953–2016) Norgrove, Linda (1974–2010) Young, Lorna (1952–96) Anthropology, Ethnography Hasluck, Margaret see Fairfield, Cecily (1892–1983) Smith, Christina (1809–93) Archaeology (including Egyptology, etc.) Campbell, Marion, of Kilberry (1919–2000) Griffith, Nora see Quibell, Annie (1861–1927) MacLagan, Christian (1811–1901) Marshall, Dorothy see Marshall, Sheina (1896–1977) Quibell, Annie (1861–1927) Robertson, Anne (1910–97) Sandeman, Mary see Campbell, Marion, of Kilberry (1919–2000) Stewart, Margaret (1907–86) Architecture Brodie, Margaret (1907–97) Burnet, Edith (1888–1971) Findlay, Kathryn (1953–2014) Hughes, Edith see Burnet, Edith (1888–1971) Robertson, Isabel see Gillespie, Margaret (1841–1913) Art and crafts (including glassmaking and painting, see also Sculpture) Annand, Louise (1915–2012) Armour, Mary see Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920) Balneaves, Elizabeth (1911–2006) Barns-Graham, Wilhelmina (1912–2004) Blackburn, Jemima (1823–1909) Blackwell, Elizabeth (1707–c. 1758) Blatherwick, Lily see Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920) Boyle, Eleanor Vere (1825–1916) Brown, Helen see Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920) Burkhauser, Jude see Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920) Burton, Mary Rose (1857–1900) Cameron, Katharine (1874–1965) Cameron, Mary (1865–1921) Cheverton, Charlotte (1960–91) Chilton, Margaret (1875–1963) Dean, Stansmore see Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920) Dewar, de Courcy see Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920)



470

Douglas, Cecilia (1772–1862) Douthwaite, Patricia (1934–2002) Dunlop, Marion Wallace- see Wallace-Dunlop, Marion (1864–1942) Eardley, Joan (1921–63) Forbes, Anne see Read, Katharine (1723–78) French, Annie see Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920) Geissler, Alison (1907–2011) Gilmour, Margaret see Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920) Gilmour, Mary see Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920) Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920) Gordon-Cumming, Lady Eliza (c. 1798–1842) Gray, Norah Neilson (1882–1931) Greenlees, Georgina (1849–1932) Haig, Florence see Burton, Mary Rose (1857–1900) Hay, Helen (1867–1955) Hotchkis, Anna (1885–1984) Inglis, Esther (b. c. 1569, d. 1624) Jacob, Violet (1863–1946) Johnstone, Dorothy (1892–1980) Kemp, Margaret see Chilton, Margaret (1875–1963) King, Jessie (1875–1949) Lamb, Helen see Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920) Low, Bet (1924–2007) Macbean, Mary see Carmichael, Elizabeth (1870–1928) Macbeth, Ann (1875–1948) McCrae, Georgiana (1804–90) Macdonald, Ann (1849–1924) Macdonald, Frances see Macdonald, Margaret (1864–1933) Macdonald, Margaret (1864–1933) McDougall, Lily (1875–1958) MacGoun, Hannah (1864–1913) McIan, Frances (b. c. 1814, d. 1897) McLellan, Sadie (1914–2007) McMurtrie, Mary (1902–2003) MacNicol, Elizabeth (Bessie) (1869–1904) Mann, Kathleen (1908–2000) Moberg, Gun (1941–2007) Moncrieff, Marianne (1874–1961) Montgomerie, Norah (1908–98) Moore, Eleanor see Tanner, Ann (1923–2001)

Thematic Index

Moore, Eleanor see Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920) Moorhead, Ethel (1869–1955) Nasmyth, Anne see Nasmyth, Jane (1788–1867) Nasmyth, Barbara see Nasmyth, Jane (1788–1867) Nasmyth, Charlotte see Nasmyth, Jane (1788–1867) Nasmyth, Elizabeth see Nasmyth, Jane (1788–1867) Nasmyth, Jane (1788–1867) Nasmyth, Margaret see Nasmyth, Jane (1788–1867) Newbery, Jessie (1864–1948) Newbery, Mary see Newbery, Jessie (1864–1948) Oliver, Cordelia (1923–2009) Parker, Agnes Miller (1895–1980) Paterson, Mary see Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920) Quibell, Annie (1861–1927) Read, Katharine (1723–78) Redpath, Anne (1895–1965) Robertson, Christina (1796–1854) Ross, Elizabeth (1789–1875) Royds, Mabel (1874–1941) Sandison, May (b. c. 1825, d. 1888) Simon, Edith (1917–2003) Smyth, Dorothy see Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920) So, Pamela (1947–2010) Stewart Smith, Janet (Jane) (1839–1925) Sulter, Maud (1960–2008) Swain, Margaret (1909–2002) Tanner, Ann (1923–2001) Trail, Ann (1798–1872) Traquair, Phoebe (1852–1936) Turner, Annie (1901–77) Walford, Lucy (1845–1915) Walker, Ethel (1861–1951) Wallace-Dunlop, Marion (1864–1942) Walton, Cecile (1891–1956) Walton, Constance see Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920) Watts, Mary (1849–1938) Whyte, Helen (Kath) (1909–96) Wishart, Sylvia (1936–2008) Wood, Wendy (1892–1981) Zinkeisen, Anna see Zinkeisen, Doris (1898–1991) Zinkeisen, Doris (1898–1991) Astronomy Fleming, Williamina (1857–1911) Herschel, Margaret (1810–84) Sadler, Flora (1912–2000) Short, Maria (b. before 1788, d. 1869) Smyth, Jessica (1816–96) Somerville, Mary (1780–1872) Biology, Botany, Zoology Alcock, Nora (1874–1972) Andrews, Sheila (1939–97) Auerbach, Charlotte (1899–1994) Baird, Joyce (1929–2014)



Barnett, Euphemia (1890–1970) Baxter, Evelyn (1879–1959) Blackwell, Elizabeth (baptised 1707, d. c. 1758) Currie, Ethel (1899–1963) Dalhousie, Christian, Countess of see Ramsay, Christian (1786–1839) Duncan, Ursula (1910–85) Farquharson, Marian (1846–1912) Frankland, Grace (1858–1946) Gordon, Isabella (1901–88) Hutchison, Isobel Wylie (1889–1982) McDouall, Agnes (1838–1926) Mackinnon, Doris (1883–1956) MacLeod, Anna (1917–2004) Marshall, Sheina (1896–1977) Murray, Lady Charlotte (1754–1808) Murray, Noreen (1935–2011) Noble, Mary (1911–2002) Pirie, Mary (1822–85) Ramsay, Christian, Countess of Dalhousie (1786–1839) Rintoul, Leonora see Baxter, Evelyn (1879–1959) Ritchie, Marjorie (1948–2015) Robertson, Muriel (1883–1973) Smith, Ann Lorrain (Annie) (1854–1937) Stewart, Olga (1920–98) Campaigners and activists (see also Women’s ­organisations) Acquroff, Helen (1831–87) Althaus-Reid, Marcella (1952–2009) Baird, Joyce (1929–2014) Baird, Matilda (May) (1901–83) Bon, Ann Fraser (1838–1936) Buchan, Jane (Janey) (1926–2012) Caird, Alice (1854–1932) Carmichael, Kay (1925–2009) Crofton, Eileen (1919–2010) Crookstone, Jackie (1768–97) Farquharson, Marian (1846–1912) Farquharson, Marjorie (1953–2016) Fraser, Lady Marion (1932–2016) Garrett, Edward see Mayo, Isabella (1843–1914) Gillan, Evelyn see Raffles, Frances (1955–94) Girling, Elizabeth (1913–2005) Gordon, Maria (1864–1939) Gray, Elspet (1929–2013) Haldane, Elizabeth (1862–1937) Harrison, Margaret (1918–2015) Hay, Jane (1864–1914) Hepburn, Anne (1925–2016) Hewat, Elizabeth (1895–1968) Innes, Susan (Sue) (1948–2005) Jarvie, Margaret (1928–2004)

471

Thematic Index



Levison, Mary (1923–2011) Lindsay, Anna see Irwin, Margaret (1858–1940) Linklater, Marjorie (1909–97) MacAskill, Ishbel (1941–2011) Macdonald, Agnes (1882–1966) MacDonald, Margo (1943–2014) McGuire, Violet see Swankie, Emily (1915–2008) Mckechnie, Sheila Marshall (1948–2004) MacLeod, Mary see Màiri nighean Alasdair Ruaidh (c. 1615–c. 1707) Macmillan, Chrystal (1872–1937) MacPherson, Mary see Màiri Mhòr nan Òran (1821–98) Mair, Sarah Siddons (1846–1941) Màiri Mhòr nan Òran (1821–98) Màiri nighean Alasdair Ruaidh (c. 1615–c. 1707) Mayo, Isabella (1843–1914) Mitchell, Elizabeth (1880–1980) Mitchison, Naomi (1897–1999) Morrison, Agnes Brysson see Morrison, Agnes (1903–86) Raffles, Frances (Franki) (1955–94) Ransford, Tessa (1938–2015) Reekie, Stella (1922–82) Sievwright, Margaret (1844–1905) Skea, Isabella (1845–1914) Somerville, Euphemia (1860–1935) Steel, Flora (1847–1929) Steven, Helen (1942–2016) Stopes, Marie (1880–1958) Sulter, Maud (1960–2008) Swankie, Emily (1915–2008) Templeton, Elizabeth (1945–2015) Wood, Wendy (1892–1981) Chemistry Fulhame, Elizabeth (fl. 1780–94) Miller, Christina (Chrissie) (1899–2001) Pirret, Ruth (1874–1939) Commerce, Industry/Trades Anderson, Janet (Jenny) (1697–1761) Baxter, Ena see Baxter, Ethelreda (Ethel) (1883–1963) Baxter, Ethelreda (Ethel) (1883–1963) Baxter, Margaret see Baxter, Ethelreda (Ethel) (1883–1963) Beckett, Frances see Murray, Catherine (1814–86) Brechin, Ethel (1894–1986) Broadwood, Lucy (1858–1929) Brooksbank, Mary (1897–1978) Campbell, Agnes (baptised 1637, d. 1716) Cranston, Catherine (Kate) (1849–1934) Cumming, Elizabeth (1827–94) Devine, Rachel (1875–1960) Dick, Beetty (1693–1773)



Dunmore, Catherine, Countess of see Murray, Catherine (1814–86) Erskine, Mary (1629–1707) Evota (Eve) of Stirling (fl. 1304) Fenwick, Margaret (1919–92) Finnie, Agnes (d. 1645) Flucker, Barbara (1784–1869) Fockart, Janet (b. before 1550, d. 1596) Gillon, Mary (1898–2002) Gunn, Isabel (1781–1861) Hastie, Annie (1922–2002) Hodge, Hannah (b. 1751, d. after 1833) Hutton, Sibilla (b. before 1773, d. 1808) Johnston, Elizabeth see Flucker, Barbara (1784–1869) Keiller, Janet (b. c. 1737, d. 1813) Keyzer, Isabella (1922–92) King, Mary see Rough, Alison (b. c. 1480, d. 1535) Liston, Esther (1896–1989) Lovi, Isabell (fl. 1805–27) Lyon, Sibilla (b. before 1738, d. 1754) MacCallum, Ann see Murray, Catherine (1814–86) McGhie, Margaret (fl. 1760–1770s) McIver, Margaret (Maggie) (1879–1958) Mackinnon, Georgina (1884–1973) Manson, Mary (1897–1994) Masterton, Margaret (1709–37) Miller, Elizabeth (Betsy) (1792–1864) Milligan, Frances see Liston, Esther (1896–1989) Miner, Mary (1910–91) Moncrieff, Marianne (1874–1961) Moore, Jane (b. c. 1635, d. 1695) Morice, Margaret (baptised 1710, d. 1800) Murray, Catherine, Countess of Dunmore (1814–86) Pullinger, Dorothée (1894–1986) Radcliffe, Mary Ann (baptised 1746, d. 1818) Rough, Alison (b. c. 1480, d. 1535) Rynd, Janet (c. 1504–53) Schireham, Marjory de (fl. 1326–31) Shaw, Christian, of Bargarran (b. 1686, d. after 1737) Shiel, Isabella (Tibbie) (1782–1878) Sinclair, Isabella (1776–95) Sutherland, Margaret (1891–1923) Toward, Agnes (1886–1975) Waldie, Charlotte (1788–1859) Williamson, Euphemia (1846–1929) Williamson, Isabel (c. 1430–c. 1493) Wood, Lucky (d. c. 1717) Young, Lorna (1952–1996) Cookery-book writers (see Food and drink) Courtiers Beaton, Mary see Maries, The Four (b. 16th century) Blak Lady, The (fl. 1507–8)

472

Thematic Index



Buccleuch, Anna, Duchess of see Scott, Anna (1651–1732) Douglas, Lady Margaret, Countess of Lennox (1515–78) Drummond, Jane, Countess of Roxburghe (b. in or before 1585, d. 1643) Fleming, Mary see Maries, The Four (b. 16th century) Gordon, Jane, Countess of Bothwell (1545–1629) Gordon, Jane, Duchess of see Maxwell, Jane (b. c. 1749, d. 1812) Hay, Helen, Countess of Linlithgow (b. before 1570, d. 1627) Huntly, Henrietta, Countess of see Stewart, Henrietta (1573–1642) Inglis, Esther (b. c. 1569, d. 1624) Keith, Annas, Countess of Moray, Countess of Argyll (d. 1588) Kennedy, Janet, Lady Bothwell (c. 1480–1547) Linlithgow, Helen, Countess of see Hay, Helen (b. before 1570, d. 1627) Mar, Annabella, Countess of see Murray, Annabella (1536–1603) Maries, The Four (b. 16th century) Maxwell, Lady Winifred, Countess of Nithsdale (1672–1749) Murray, Annabella, Countess of Mar (1536–1603) Murray, Lady Elizabeth, Countess of Dysart (baptised 1626, d. 1698) Ruthven, Katherine, Lady Glenorchy (d. 1584) Scott, Anna, Duchess of Buccleuch (1651–1732) Scott, Jean (Janet), Lady Ferniehirst (c. 1548–c. 1595) Seton, Mary see Maries, The Four (b. 16th century) Stewart, Elizabeth, Countess of Arran (c. 1554–c. 1595) Stewart, Henrietta, Countess of Huntly (1573–1642) Criminals (see Transgression) Development (see also Aid) Farquharson, Marjorie (1953–2016) Hart, Constance (Judith) (1924–91) Norgrove, Linda (1974–2010) Young, Lorna (1952–96) Diaspora Aud (Unn) the Deep-Minded (c. 850–c. 900) Bon, Ann Fraser (1838–1936) Bruce, Isabella see Isabella Bruce, Queen of Norway (1272–1358) Bryson, Elizabeth (b. 1880, d. c. 1969) Campbell, Jane (1869–1947) Campbell, Lady Agnes (c. 1525–c. 1601) Dalrymple, Learmonth (Leah) (baptised 1827, d. 1906) Davidson, Harriet Miller see Miller, Lydia (baptised 1812, d. 1876) Dawson, Ellen (1900–67)

Drysdale, Anne (1792–1853) Forlong(e), Eliza (baptised 1784, d. 1859) Fraser, Janet (1883–1945) Gessler, Pauline see Lyon, Jane (1771–1842) Graham, Isabella (1742–1814) Greig, Jane (1872–1939) Gunn, Isabel (1781–1861) Hargrave, Letitia (1813–54) Isabella Bruce, Queen of Norway (1272–1358) Lyon, Jane (1771–1842) McCrae, Georgiana (1804–90) MacDonald, Flora (1722–90) Macdonald, Louisa (1858–1949) McKinnon, Catherine see Lyon, Jane (1771–1842) Macquarie, Elizabeth (1778–1835) Martin, Catherine (1847–1937) Miner, Mary (1910–91) Neill, Elizabeth (1846–1926) Nichols, Sarah see Lyon, Jane (1771–1842) O’Donnell, Finola (c. 1552–c. 1610) Sheppard, Catherine (Kate) (1848–1934) Sievwright, Margaret (1844–1905) Slessor, Mary (1848–1915) Small, Ann (Annie) (1857–1945) Spence, Catherine (1825–1910) Steel, Flora (1847–1929) Stewart, Annabella see Stewart, Margaret (1424–45) Stewart, Eleanor see Stewart, Margaret (1424–45) Stewart, Isabella see Stewart, Margaret (1424–45) Stewart, Margaret (1424–45) Stewart, Mary see Stewart, Margaret (1424–45) Stirling, Emma (1838/9–1907) Trout, Jennie (1841–1921) Waterston, Jane (1843–1932) Wilson, Margaret (baptised 1795, d. 1835) Wright, Camilla see Wright, Frances (1795–1852) Wright, Frances (1795–1852) Ecology, Environmental Science Linklater, Marjorie (1909–97) Norgrove, Linda (1974–2010) Shepherd, Anna (Nan) (1893–1981) Economics McKay, Ailsa (1963–2014) Education Ainslie, Charlotte (1863–1960) Allan, Jean (1908–91) Anderson, Christina see Watson, Alexandra (1872–1936) Annand, Louise (1915–2012) Arthur, Jane (1827–1907) Black, Margaret see Paterson, Grace (1843–1925) Bond, Elizabeth (b. c. 1767, d. 1839) Burnley Campbell, Margaret (1858–1938) Calderon de la Barca, Frances Marquesa (1804–82)

473

Thematic Index



Campbell, Janet (Jessie) (1827–1907) Cheverton, Charlotte (Lottie) (1960–91) Cook, Rachel see Lumsden, Louisa (1840–1935) Cowan, Minna (1878–1951) Crawford, Jane (1864–1947) Crawford, Marion (‘Crawfie’) (1909–88) Crudelius, Mary (1839–77) Dalrymple, Learmonth (Leah) (baptised 1827, d. 1906) Daniell, Madeline (1832–1906) De la Cour, Ethel see Wright, Christian (1844–1907) Dods, Meg see Johnstone, Christian (1781–1857) Elder, Isabella (1828–1905) Farquhar, Barbara (1815–75) Fish, Elizabeth (1860–1944) Fraser, Lady Marion (1932–2016) Galloway, Janet (1841–1909) Geddes, Anna (1857–1917) Graham, Isabella (1742–1814) Grant, Beatrice (baptised 1761, d. 1845) Greig, Clara see Greig, Jane (1872–1939) Hamilton, Agnes (b. c. 1794, d. 1870) Hamilton, Elizabeth (1758–1816) Hardy, Lileen see Maclagan, Mary (1853–1943) Hogg, Jane (1834–1900) Johnstone, Christian (1781–1857) Johnstone, Dorothy (1892–1980) Kay, Christina (1878–1951) Kinnear, Georgina (b. c. 1826/7, d. 1914) Laws, Margaret (1849–1921) Lumsden, Louisa (1840–1935) Lyon, Jane (1771–1842) Macdonald, Louisa (1858–1949) McMillan, Margaret (1860–1931) McMillan, Rachel see McMillan, Margaret (1860–1931) Malloch, Elizabeth (1910–2000) Marishall, Jean (fl. 1766–89) Marley, Hilda (1876–1951) Melville, Frances (1873–1962) Nichol, Elizabeth Pease (1807–97) Paterson, Grace (1843–1925) Pirie, Jane (1779–1833) Sidgwick, Eleanor (Nora) (1845–1936) Skea, Isabella (1845–1914) Small, Ann (Annie) (1857–1945) Spence, Catharine (1823–1906) Spens, Janet see Watson, Margaret (1873–1959) Stevenson, Flora (1839–1905) Stevenson, Louisa see Stevenson, Flora (1839–1905) Wallace, Lady Eglinton (b. c. 1754, d. 1803) Waterston, Jane Elizabeth (1843–1932) Watson, Margaret (1873–1959) Wilson, Margaret (baptised 1795, d. 1835)

Woods, Marianne see Pirie, Jane (1779–1833) Wright, Christian (1844–1907) Engineering and technology Buchanan, Dorothy (1899–1985) Drummond, Victoria (1894–1978) Fergusson, Mary (1914–97) Pullinger, Dorothée (1894–1986) Estate management (see Farming and estate ­management) Farming and estate management Argyll, Anna, Countess of see MacKenzie, Anna (1621–1707) Armstrong, Janet (Jenny) (1903–85) Baillie, Lady Grisell (1665–1746) Balcarres, Anna, Countess of see MacKenzie, Anna (1621–1707) Balfour, Lady Evelyn (1898–1990) Buccleuch, Anna, Duchess of see Scott, Anna (1651–1732) Campbell, Katherine, Countess of Crawford (b. before 1538, d. 1578) Dalrymple, Christian (1765–1838) Drysdale, Anne (1792–1853) Duncan, Ursula (1910–85) Eglinton, Susanna, Countess of see Montgomerie, Susanna (1689/90–1780) Forlong(e), Eliza (c. 1784–1859) Gordon Cathcart, Lady Emily (1845–1932) Gordon, Henrietta, Duchess of (1681–1760) Gordon, Jane (Jean), Countess of Bothwell (1545–1629) Gordon, Jane, Duchess of see Maxwell, Jane (b. c. 1749, d. 1812) Hamilton, Anne, 3rd Duchess of (1632–1716) Hamilton, Margaret, Countess of Panmure (1668–1731) Hardie, Margaret (b. c. 1625, d. after 1660) Huntly, Henrietta, Countess of see Stewart, Henrietta (1573–1642) Isabella, Countess of Lennox see Joan Beaufort, Queen of Scotland (d. 1445) Keith, Annas, Countess of Moray, Countess of Argyll (d. 1588) Kennedy, Janet, Lady Bothwell (c. 1480–1547) King, Mary (1905–98) Leigh, Margaret Mary (1894–1973) Macdonald, Margaret, of Sleat (d. 1799) MacKenzie, Anna, Countess of Balcarres (1621–1707) Mackenzie, Isabel, Countess of Seaforth (b. c. 1640, buried 1715) MacPherson, Margaret (1908–2001) Mar, Annabella, Countess of see Murray, Annabella (1536–1603)

474

Thematic Index



Maxwell, Jane, Duchess of Gordon (b. c. 1749, d. 1812) Montgomerie, Susanna (1689/90–1780) Mure, Elizabeth (of Caldwell) (c. 1715–c. 1791) Murray, Annabella, Countess of Mar (1536–1603) Nairne, Lady Margaret (1669–1747) Neil, Annie (Andy) (1924–2004) Neil, Christina see Neil, Annie (1924–2004) Ogilvy of Melgund, Lady Marion (b. c. 1503, d. 1575) Panmure, Margaret, Countess of see Hamilton, Margaret (1668–1731) Ragnhild Simonsdatter (fl. 1299) Ruthven, Katherine, Lady Glenorchy (d. 1584) Scott, Anna, Duchess of Buccleuch (1651–1732) Scott, Jean (Janet), Lady Ferniehirst (c. 1548, d. after 1595) Stewart, Henrietta, Countess of Huntly (1573–1642) Stirling Graham, Clementina (1782–1877) Sutherland, Elizabeth, Duchess-Countess of (1765–1839) Tollemache, Elizabeth, Duchess of Argyll (1659–1735) Watson, Alexandra (Mona) (1872–1936) Wood, Wendy (1892–1981) Young, Issobell (b. c. 1565, d. 1629) Fishing Ballantine, Georgina (1889–1970) Cordiner, Helen (1893–1964) Flucker, Barbara (1784–1869) Johnston, Elizabeth see Flucker, Barbara (1784–1869) Liston, Esther Wilson (1896–1989) Milligan, Frances see Liston, Esther (1896–1989) Sutherland, Margaret (Greta) (1891–1923) Watt, Christian (1832–1923) Food and drink Baxter, Ena see Baxter, Ethelreda (Ethel) (1883–1963) Baxter, Ethelreda (Ethel) (1883–1963) Baxter, Margaret see Baxter, Ethelreda (Ethel) (1883–1963) Craig, Elizabeth (1883–1980) Cumming, Elizabeth (1827–94) Dickson Wright, Clarissa (1947–2014) Dods, Meg see Johnstone, Christian (1781–1857) Girling, Elizabeth (1913–2005) Johnstone, Christian Isobel (1781–1857) Keiller, Janet (b. c. 1737, d. 1813) Leneman, Leah (1944–99) McGhie, Margaret (fl. 1760–1770s) Mackenzie, Joan (1929–2007) Mackinnon, Georgina (Gina) (1884–1973) MacLeod, Anna (1917–2004) McNeill, Florence (1885–1973) Morice, Margaret (baptised 1710, d. 1800) Robertson, Hannah (b. 1724, d. after 1807)

Sampson, Margery (1890–1915) Shiel, Isabella (Tibbie) (1782–1878) Steel, Flora (1847–1929) Sutherland, Anne (1922–2011) Towser (1963–87) Wood, Lucky (d. c. 1717) Wright, Christian (1844–1907) Gaelic culture Aithbhreac inghean Coirceadail (fl. 1470) Argyll, Isabella, Countess of see Iseabail ní Mheic Cailein (fl. 1480s–1490s) Brown, Dorothy see Diorbhail nic a’Bhruthainn (fl. 1644) Burnley Campbell, Margaret (1858–1938) Campbell of Canna, Margaret Fay Shaw see Shaw, Margaret (1903–2004) Campbell, Anna (fl. 1773) Campbell, Marion (1867–1970) Campbell, Marioun (b. c. 1540s, d. after 1601) Carmichael, Elizabeth (Ella) (1870–1928) Catriona nic Fhearghais (fl. 1745–6) Ceapaich, Sileas na see Sileas nighean mhic Raghnaill (c. 1660–c. 1729) Chaimbeul, Fionnghal (fl. 1645–48) Clark, Mary (c. 1740–c. 1815) Diorbhail nic a’Bhruthainn (fl. 1644) Ferguson, Christiana see Catriona nic Fhearghais (fl. 1745–6) Gormla (Gormshuil Mhor) (fl. 17th century) Grant, Anne, of Laggan (1755–1838) Grant, Isabel (1887–1983) Grant, Katherine (1845–1928) Iseabail ní Mheic Cailein (fl. 1480s–1490s) Johnston, Anne (1886–1963) Kennedy-Fraser, Marjory (1857–1930) MacAskill, Ishbel (1941–2011) MacDonald, Catherine see Campbell, Marion (1867–1970) MacDonald, Cicely see Sileas nighean mhic Raghnaill (c. 1660–c. 1729) Mackellar, Mary (1834–90) Mackenzie, Agnes (1891–1955) Mackenzie, Joan (1929–2007) Mackenzie, Penelope (b. c. 1675, d. 1743) MacKinnon, Nan (1902–82) MacLachlan, Jessie (1866–1916) MacLeod, Catherine (Kitty) (1914–2000) MacLeod, Flora (1878–1976) MacLeod, Mary see Màiri nighean Alasdair Ruaidh (c. 1615–c. 1707) MacNeil, Aithbhreac see Aithbhreac inghean Coirceadail (fl. 1470) MacNeil, Flora (1928–2015)

475

Thematic Index



MacPherson, Mary see Màiri Mhòr nan Òran (1821–98) Macpherson, Mary see Clark, Mary (c. 1740–c. 1815) Mairearad nighean Lachlainn (b. c. 1660) Màiri Mhòr nan Òran (1821–98) Màiri nighean Alasdair Ruaidh (b. c. 1615, buried c. 1707) Nan Eachainn Fhionnlaigh see MacKinnon, Nan (1902–82) ‘Nicneven’ (or Nicnevin, Nicniven) (fl. 1560s) Ross, Elizabeth (1789–1875) Shaw, Margaret Fay (1903–2004) Sileas nighean mhic Raghnaill (c. 1660–c. 1729) Stewart-Murray, Lady Evelyn (1868–1940) Tolmie, Frances (1840–1926) Watt, Eilidh (Helen) (1908–96) Gardening Burnett, Sybil, Lady (1889–1960) Burton, Mary see Burton, Mary (1819–1909) Christie, Isabella (Ella) (1861–1949) Elder, Margaret (Madge) (1893–1985) Geddes, Nora see Geddes, Anna (1857–1917) Keswick, Margaret (Maggie) (1941–1995) McDouall, Agnes (1838–1926) McMurtrie, Mary (1902–2003) Macquarie, Elizabeth (1778–1835) Renton, Dorothy (1898–1966) Sawyer, Mairi (1879–1953) Geography, Geology, Palaeontology Andrews, Sheila (1939–97) Callcott, Maria, Lady see Graham, Maria (1785–1842) Currie, Ethel (1899–1963) Gordon-Cumming, Lady Eliza (b. c. 1798, d. 1842) Gordon, Maria (1864–1939) Graham, Maria (Lady Callcott) (1785–1842) Gray, Elizabeth (1831–1924) Newbigin, Marion (1869–1934) Reynolds, Doris (1899–1985) Smyth, Jessica (1816–96) Snodgrass, Catherine (1902–74) Somerville, Mary (1780–1872) Watson, Janet (1923–85) Health, healing, medicine: mental health Bates, Diana see Rushforth, Winifred (1885–1983) Fraser, Kate (1877–1957) Marley, Hilda (1876–1951) Rushforth, Winifred (1885–1983) Health, healing, medicine: nurses, midwives, health visitors Altschul, Annie (1919–2001) Balfour, Elizabeth (Betty) (1832–1918) Bane, Margaret (b. before 1567, d. 1597) Barclay, Williamina (1883–1975)

Bethune, Margaret (1820–87) Boyd, Maggie (1905–99) Buick, Mary (1777–1854) Chisholm, Mairi (1896–1981) Cleghorn, Louisa (b. c. 1720, d. after 1775) Cowper, Christian see Bethune, Margaret (1820–87) Gessler, Pauline see Lyon, Jane (1771–1842) Govan, Jean see Boyd, Maggie (1905–99) Graham, Margaret (1860–1933) Gray, Norah (1882–1931) Gregory, Andrina see Gregory, Helen (1898–1946) Innes, Katherine see Burton, Mary Rose (1857–1900) Johnston, Euphemia (b. 1824, d. after 1867) Knight, Annie (1906–96) Leslie, Beatrix (Beatrice) (b. c. 1578, d. 1661) Lumsden, Rachel (1835–1908) Manson, Ethel see Stewart, Eliza (1855–1910) Marshall, Margaret see Sheina MacAlister (1896–1977) Masson, Flora see Masson, Rosaline (1867–1949) Myles, Margaret (1892–1988) Neill, Elizabeth (1846–1926) Quaile, Barbara (1906–99) Renton, Barbara see Quaile, Barbara (1906–99) Scottish Women’s Hospitals Stewart, Eliza (later Isla) (1855–1910) Strong, Rebecca (1843–1944) Tayler, Helen (1869–1951) Young, Mary (1883–1945) Health, healing, medicine: other Baird, Matilda (May) (1901–83) Blackwell, Elizabeth (baptised 1707, d. c. 1758) Borrowman, Agnes (1881–1955) Boyman, Janet (b. before 1548, d. 1572) Brown, Marion (1843–1915) Bryans, Anne (1919–2004) Carnegie, Susan (1743–1821) Chance, Janet (1886–1953) Crichton, Elizabeth (1779–1862) Crofton, Eileen (1919–2010) Douglas, Charlotte (1894–1979) Evans, Helen see Archdale, Helen (1876–1949); Daniell, Madeline (1832–1906); Jex-Blake, Sophia (1840–1912) Fairfield, Josephine see Fairfield, Cecily (1892–1983) Gillan, Evelyn see Raffles, Frances (1955–94) Hunter, Nellie see Scottish Women’s Hospitals Keswick, Margaret (Maggie) (1941–95) Laurie, Jessie see Scottish Women’s Hospitals Leith, Anne (fl. 1740s) Leslie Mackenzie, Lady see Mackenzie, Helen (1859–1945) Lumsden, Katharine Maria see Lumsden, Rachel (1835–1908)

476

Thematic Index



Mackenzie, Helen (1859–1945) McMillan, Margaret (1860–1931) McMillan, Rachel see McMillan, Margaret (1860–1931) Macnaughtan, Sarah (1864–1916) Michie, Janet Ray (1934–2008) Norgrove, Linda (1974–2010) Pirret, Mary see Pirret, Ruth (1874–1939) Ritson, Muriel (1885–1980) Robertson, Muriel (1883–1973) St Clair Erskine, Lady Millicent (1867–1955) Sampson, Agnes (d. 1591) Stopes, Marie (1880–1958) Sutherland, Millicent, Duchess of see St Clair Erskine, Millicent (1867–1955) Wright, Bessie (fl. 1611–28) Health, healing, medicine: physicians Baird, Joyce (1929–2014) Baird, Matilda (May) (1901–83) Balfour, Margaret (1866–1945) Barnett, Isobel, Lady (1918–80) Barry, James (b. c. 1789, d. 1865) Bryson, Elizabeth (1880–c. 1969) Cadell, Grace (1855–1918) Chalmers Smith, Dorothea see Smith, Dorothea (1872–1944) Crofton, Eileen (1919–2010) Cumming, Alice see Gilchrist, Marion (1864–1952) Emslie, Isabel see Scottish Women’s Hospitals Esslemont, Mary (1891–1984) Forbes-Sempill, Elizabeth (1912–91) Fraser, Kate (1877–1957) Gilchrist, Marion (1864–1952) Gordon, Mary see Scottish Women’s Hospitals Gregory, Helen (Ella) (1898–1946) Greig, Jane (1872–1939) Greig, Janet see Greig, Jane (1872–1939) Henry, Lydia see Scottish Women’s Hospitals Herzfeld, Gertrude (1890–1981) Inglis, Elsie (1864–1917) Jagannadham, Annie see Vakil, Merbai (1868–1941) Jex-Blake, Sophia (1840–1912) Jones, Mabel see Cadell, Grace (1855–1918) Keer, Honoria (1883–1969) Ker, Alice Jane Shannan Stewart (1853–1943) Kerr, Isabella (1875–1932) Lillie, Helen see Scottish Women’s Hospitals Macgregor, Janet (1920–2005) McGregor, Jessie see Inglis, Elsie (1864–1917) McIlroy, Anne (c. 1875–1968) McLaren, Agnes (1837–1913) Macphail, Katherine (1887–1974) Marshall, Mary see Watson, Alexandra (1872–1936) Moorhead, Alice see Thomson, Emily (c. 1864–1955)

Murray, Flora (1869–1923) Paterson-Brown, June (1932–2009) Pickford, Lillian (1902–2002) Ross, Elizabeth see Scottish Women’s Hospitals Savage, Agnes (1906–64) Savill, Agnes see Scottish Women’s Hospitals Scottish Women’s Hospitals Smith, Dorothea (1872–1944) Sutherland, Anne (1922–2011) Thomson, Emily (c. 1864–1955) Thomson, Margaret (1902–82) Trout, Jennie (1841–1921) Vakil, Merbai (1868–1941) Waterston, Jane (1843–1932) Watson, Alexandra (1872–1936) Wells, Annie see Vakil, Merbai (1868–1941) Wolff, Sulammith (1924–2009) Heroines, risk takers Alexander, Helen (c. 1653/4–1729) Arran, Elizabeth, Countess of see Stewart, Elizabeth (c. 1554–c. 1595) Aud (Unn) the Deep-Minded (c. 850–c. 900) Baillie, Lady Grisell (1665–1746) Barlass, Kate see Douglas, Katharine (fl. 1437) Bohemia, Elizabeth, Queen of see Stewart, Elizabeth (1596–1662) Bruce, Christian (fl. 1306–57) Buchan, Elspeth (1740–91) Buchan, Isobel, Countess of see Fife, Isobel of (c. 1285–c. 1314) Cameron, Jenny (Jean) (c. 1698–1772) Carrick, Marjory, Countess of (fl. 1256–92) Clanranald, Margaret, Lady see MacLeod, Margaret (b. before 1720, d. 1780) Comyn, Agnes, Countess of Strathearn (fl. 1296–1320) Crookstone, Jackie (1768–97) Dixie, Florence (1855–1905) Douglas, Elizabeth see Fletcher, Christian ( fl. 1619/20–1691) Drinkwater, Winifred (1913–96) Dunbar, Agnes, Countess of see Randolph, Agnes (b. before 1324, d. c. 1369) Erskine, Lady Mary see Fletcher, Christian ( fl. 1619/20–1691) Fife, Isobel of, Countess of Buchan (c. 1285–c. 1314) Fletcher, Christian (fl. 1619/20–1691) Fraser, Eliza (c. 1798–1858) Geddes, Jenny (fl. 1670) Gloag, Helen (b. 1750) Halkett, Anne, Lady see Murray, Anne (1623–99) Hutchison, Isobel Wylie (1889–1982) Knight, Annie (1906–96)

477

Thematic Index



Leith, Anne (fl. 1740s) Lindsay, Anne see Fletcher, Christian (fl. 1619/20–1691) Lindsay, Sophia see MacKenzie, Anna (1621–1707) McDonald, Camelia (1909–60) MacDonald, Flora (1722–90) McKay, Anne (fl. 1740s and 50s) Mackintosh, Lady Anne (1723–87) MacLeod, Margaret, Lady Clanranald (b. before 1720, d. 1780) MacRuairi, Christiana, of the Isles (fl. 1290–1318) Matheson, Kay (1928–2013) Maxwell, Lady Winifred, Countess of Nithsdale (1672–1749) Moar, May (1825–94) Mouat, Elizabeth (Betty) (1825–1918) Murray, Anne, Lady Halkett (1623–99) Nairne, Lady Margaret (1669–1747) Nithsdale, Winifred, Countess of see Maxwell, Lady Winifred (1672–1749) Norgrove, Linda (1974–2010) Patrick, Jane see McDonald, Camelia (1909–60) Petrie, Grace see Moar, May (1825–94) Ralphson, Mary (1698–1808) Randolph, Agnes (b. before 1324, d. c. 1369) Skinnider, Margaret (1892–1971) Smith, Katherine see Fletcher, Christian ( fl. 1619/20–1691) Stewart, Elizabeth, Queen of Bohemia (1596–1662) Stirk (Stark), Hellen (d. 1544) Thomson, Margaret (1902–82) Walker, Helen (c. 1710–91) Walker, Marion (fl. 1597–1614) Wallace, Lady Eglinton (b. c. 1754, d. 1803) Wilson, Agnes see McLachlan, Margaret (b. c. 1614) Wilson, Margaret see McLachlan, Margaret (b. c. 1614) Young, Mary (1883–1945) History, historians Anderson, Marjorie (1909–2002) Balfour, Lady Frances (1858–1931) Campbell, Marion, of Kilberry (1919–2000) Checkland, Olive (1920–2004) Dunlop, Annie (1897–1973) Grant, Isabel (Elsie) (1887–1983) Hewat, Elizabeth (1895–1968) Innes, Susan (Sue) (1948–2005) Larner, Christina (Kirsty) (1933–83) Leneman, Leah (1944–99) Lochhead, Marion (1902–85) Mackenzie, Agnes (1891–1955) Marshall, Henrietta (1867–1941) Mitchison, Rosalind (Rowy) (1919–2002) Murray, Eunice (1878–1960) Shire, Helena (1912–91)

Spence, Catharine (1823–1906) Stopes, Charlotte (1840–1929) Swain, Margaret (1909–2002) Tanner, Ann (1923–2001) Tayler, Helen (1869–1951) Watson, Jean see Keddie, Henrietta (1827–1914) Wormald, Jennifer (1942–2015) Industry/Trades (see Commerce, Industry/Trades) Language, linguistics Gibson, Margaret see Lewis, Agnes (1843–1920) Kay, Christian (1940–2016) Lewis, Agnes (1843–1920) Raphael, Sylvia (1914–96) Law, law reform, lawsuits Adler, Ruth (1944–94) Aitken, Margaret (d. c. 1597) Douglas, Lady Jane (1698–1753) Forbes-Sempill, Elizabeth (1912–91) Gunning, Elizabeth, Duchess of Hamilton, Duchess of Argyll (1733–90) Kidd, Margaret (1900–89) Macmillan, Chrystal (1872–1937) Ragnhild Simonsdatter (fl. 1299) Literature: children’s Bannerman, Helen Brodie Cowan (1862–1946) Callcott, Maria, Lady see Graham, Maria (1785–1842) Campbell, Marion, of Kilberry (1919–2000) Dodd, Elizabeth (1909–89) Graham, Maria (Lady Callcott) (1785–1842) Grant, Katherine (1845–1928) Hunter, Mollie (1922–2012) Lochhead, Marion (1902–85) Miller, Lydia (baptised 1812, d. 1876) Montgomerie, Norah (1908–98) Scott-Moncrieff, Agnes (Ann) (1914–43) Sinclair, Catherine (1800–64) Tytler, Ann (1781–1857) Watt, Eilidh (Helen) (1908–96) Literature: criticism Adam Smith, Janet see Smith, Janet (1905–99) Blaze de Bury, Marie (c. 1813–c. 1894) Caird, Janet (1913–92) Carswell, Catherine (1879–1946) Forrest-Thomson, Veronica (1947–75) Masson, Rosaline (1867–1949) Raine, Kathleen (1908–2003) Smith, Anne (1944–2013) Smith, Janet (1905–99) Spark, Muriel (1918–2006) Stopes, Charlotte (1840–1929) Tennant, Emma (1937–2017) Walford, Lucy (1845–1915)

478

Thematic Index

Literature: drama Adam, Helen (1909–93) Baillie, Joanna (1762–1851) Clark, Elizabeth (1918–78) Dods, Mary (c. 1790–c. 1830) Douglas, Walter see Dods, Mary (c. 1790–c. 1830) Lamont Stewart, Murdina (Ena) (1912–2006) Lyndsay, David see Dods, Mary (c. 1790–c. 1830) MacKintosh, Elizabeth (1896–1952) Marishall, Jean (fl. 1766–89) Orr, Christine (1899–1963) Stewart, Ena Lamont see Lamont Stewart, Murdina (1912–2006) Ure, Joan see Clark, Elizabeth (1918–78) Wallace, Lady Eglinton (b. c. 1754, d. 1803) Literature: fiction Allan, Eliza (Dot) (1886–1964) Brunton, Mary (1778–1818) Buchan, Anna (1877–1948) Burnett-Smith, Annie see Swan, Anne (1859–1943) Bury, Lady Charlotte (1775–1861) Caird, Alice (1854–1932) Caird, Janet (1913–92) Cameron, Elizabeth (1910–76) Campbell, Dorothea (1793–1863) Campbell, Marion, of Kilberry (1919–2000) Carswell, Catherine (1879–1946) Clapperton, Jane (1832–1914) Cowan, Evelyn (1921–88) Craik, Helen (b. c. 1751, d. 1825) Cullen, Margaret (1767–1837) Davidson, Harriet see Miller, Lydia (baptised 1812, d. 1876) Davie, Elspeth (1919–95) Derwent, Lavinia see Dodd, Elizabeth (1909–89) Dodd, Elizabeth (1909–89) Dods, Mary (c. 1790–c. 1830) Dods, Meg see Johnstone, Christian (1781–1857) Douglas, O. see Buchan, Anna (1877–1948) Douglas, Walter see Dods, Mary (c. 1790–c. 1830) Duncan, Jane see Cameron, Elizabeth (1910–76) Dunnett, Dorothy (1923–2001) Fairfield, Cecily (1892–1983) Ferrier, Susan (1782–1854) Findlater, Jane see Findlater, Mary (1865–1963) Findlater, Mary (1865–1963) Grant, Beatrice (baptised 1761, d. 1845) Hamilton, Elizabeth (1758–1816) Hamilton, Lady Mary see Walker, Lady Mary (1736–1821) Hamilton, Mary (Molly) (1882–1966) Hatton, Noel see Caird, Alice (1854–1932) Humphreys, Elizabeth (Eliza) (1850–1938)



479

Hunter, Mollie (1922–2012) Jacob, Violet (1863–1946) Johnstone, Christian (1781–1857) Keddie, Henrietta (1827–1914) Keir, Elizabeth (1750s–1834) Kesson, Jessie (1916–94) Lochhead, Marion (1902–85) Low, Helen (1886–1930) Lyall, David see Swan, Anne (1859–1943) Lyndsay, David see Dods, Mary (c. 1790–c. 1830) Lyon, Mary see Grieve, Mary (1906–98) McInnes, Helen (1907–85) Mackenzie, Agnes (1891–1955) MacKintosh, Elizabeth (1896–1952) MacLeod, Fiona see Sharp, Elizabeth (1856–1932) Macnaughtan, Sarah (1864–1916) Marishall, Jean (fl. 1766–89) Marshall, Jean see Marishall, Jean (fl. 1766–89) Martin, Catherine (1847–1937) Mitchison, Naomi (1897–1999) Moon, Lorna see Low, Helen (1886–1930) Morrison, Agnes Brysson (1903–86) Morrison, Peggy see Morrison, Agnes (1903–86) Muir, Wilhelmina (Willa) (1890–1970) Murray, Eunice (1878–1960) Oliphant, Margaret (1828–97) Orr, Christine (1899–1963) Owens, Agnes (1926–2014) Porter, Anna see Porter, Jane (1776–1850) Porter, Jane (1776–1850) Rita see Humphreys, Elizabeth (1850–1938) St Clair Erskine, Lady Millicent (1867–1955) Sandison, Janet see Cameron, Elizabeth (1910–76) Saxby, Jessie (1842–1940) Scott-Moncrieff, Agnes (Ann) (1914–43) Scott, Agnes see Muir, Wilhelmina (1890–1970) Scott, Caroline see Douglas, Lady Frances (1750–1817) Shepherd, Anna (Nan) (1893–1981) Spark, Muriel (1918–2006) Spence, Catherine Helen (1825–1910) Steel, Flora (1847–1929) Stewart, Mary (1916–2014) Strathern, Christine see Morrison, Agnes (1903–86) Sutherland, Millicent, Duchess of see St Clair Erskine, Millicent (1867–1955) Swan, Anne (Annie) (1859–1943) Tennant, Emma (1937–2017) Tey, Josephine see MacKintosh, Elizabeth (1896–1952) Todd, Margaret see Jex-Blake, Sophia (1840–1912) Tytler, Sarah see Keddie, Henrietta (1827–1914) Walford, Lucy (1845–1915) Walker, Lady Mary (1736–1821) Watson, Jean see Keddie, Henrietta (1827–1914)

Thematic Index

Watt, Eilidh (Helen) (1908–96) West, Rebecca see Fairfield, Cecily (1892–1983) Literature: life writing (diaries, letters, etc.) Adam, Mary (1699–1761) Alexander, Helen (c. 1653/4–1729) Asquith, Emma (Margot) (1864–1945) Atholl, Katherine, Duchess of see Hamilton, Katherine, Duchess of Atholl (1662–1707) Baillie, Grisie see Baillie, Lady Grisell (1665–1746) Barnard, Lady Anne (1750–1825) Bond, Elizabeth (b. c. 1767, d. 1839) Bury, Lady Charlotte (1775–1861) Cairns, Elizabeth (1685–1741) Calderon de la Barca, Frances, Marquesa (1804–82) Calderwood, Margaret (1715–74) Carlyle, Jane (1801–66) Carmichael, Kay (1925–2009) Carswell, Catherine (1879–1946) Cockburn, Alison (1713–94) Coke, Lady Mary (1726–1811) Collace, Katharine (c. 1635–c. 1697) Countrywoman see Grieve, Jemima (1923–96) Cowan, Evelyn (1921–88) Cunningham, Lady Margaret (b. before 1598, d. 1623) Dalrymple, Christian (1765–1838) Deans, Charlotte (1768–1859) Docherty, Mary (1908–2002) Dodd, Elizabeth (1909–89) Douglas, Lady Frances (1750–1817) Dunlop, Frances (1730–1815) Fleming, Marjory (1803–11) Fletcher, Eliza (1770–1858) Graham, Helen (1806–96) Grant, Anne, of Laggan (1755–1838) Grant, Elizabeth, of Rothiemurchus (1797–1885) Grieve, Jemima (1923–96) Grieve, Mary (1906–98) Hadfield, Jean see MacDougall of MacDougall, Margaret (1913–98) Halkett, Anne, Lady see Murray, Anne (1623–99) Hamilton, Katherine, Duchess of Atholl (1662–1707) Hamilton, Mary (Molly) (1882–1966) Harden, Janet (Jessie) (1776–1837) Johnston, Ellen (c. 1835–c. 1873) Leigh, Margaret (1894–1973) Macnaughtan, Sarah (1864–1916) McNeill, Florence (1885–1973) Mure, Elizabeth (of Caldwell) (c. 1715–c. 1791) Murray, Anne, Lady Halkett (1623–1699) Radcliffe, Mary (b. 1746, d. before 1818) Robertson, Hannah (b. 1724, d. after 1807) Rose, Elizabeth (1747–1815)



Ross, Katharine see Collace, Katharine (c. 1635–c. 1697) Rutherford, Alison see Cockburn, Alison (1713–94) Rutherford, Mistress (fl. 1610–1630) Schaw, Janet (b. c. 1737, d. 1801) Shepherd, Anna (Nan) (1893–1981) Simon, Edith (1917–2003) Stirling Graham, Clementina (1782–1877) Stuart, Lady Louisa (1757–1851) Teissier du Cros, Janet (1905–90) Thomson, Elizabeth (1847–1918) Toward, Agnes (1886–1975) Veitch, Marion (1638–1722) Watt, Christian (1832–1923) Literature: poetry Abbott, Wilhelmina (1884–1957) Acquroff, Helen (1831–87) Adam Smith, Janet see Smith, Janet (1905–99) Adam, Helen (1909–93) Adam, Jean (1704–65) Aithbhreac inghean Coirceadail (fl. 1470) Angus, Marion Emily (1865–1946) Argyll, Isabella, Countess of see Iseabail ní Mheic Cailein (fl. 1480s–1490s) Baillie, Joanna (1762–1851) Bannerman, Anne (1765–1829) Bernstein, Marion (1847–1906) Brown, Dorothy see Diorbhail nic a’Bhruthainn (fl. 1644) Bulter, Rhoda (1929–94) Burns, Elizabeth (1957–2015) Caird, Janet (1913–92) Campbell, Anna (fl. 1773) Campbell, Dorothea (1793–1863) Campbell, Marioun (c. 1540s–1601) Ceapaich, Sileas na see Sileas nighean mhic Raghnaill (c. 1660–c. 1729) Chaimbeul, Fionnghal (fl. 1645–48) Chalmers, Margaret (b. c. 1758) Clark, Mary (c. 1740–c. 1815) Craig, Isa (1831–1903) Craigmyle, Elizabeth (Bessie) (1863–1933) Cruickshank, Helen (1886–1975) Culross, Elizabeth, Lady see Melville, Elizabeth (c. 1578–c. 1640) Cunningham, Lady Margaret (b. before 1598, d. 1623) Diorbhail nic a’Bhruthainn (fl. 1644) Douglas, Lady Elizabeth (fl. 1587–1615) Elliot, Jean (1727–1805) Forrest-Thomson, Veronica (1947–75) Fraser, Olive (1909–77) Garry, Flora (1900–2000) Gillespie, Lilias see Skene, Lilias (1626/7–97)

480

Thematic Index



Grant, Anne, of Laggan (1755–1838) Gray, Christian see Chalmers, Margaret (b. c. 1758) Hamilton, Janet (1795–1873) Hawkins, Susannah see Chalmers, Margaret (b. c. 1758) Hume, Anna (fl. 1629–44) Hunter, Anne (1742–1821) Iseabail ní Mheic Cailein (fl. 1480s–1490s) Jacob, Violet (1863–1946) Johnston, Ellen (c. 1835–c. 1873) Ker, Anne, Countess of Lothian (c. 1615–67) Lindsay, Christian (fl. 1588) Little, Janet (baptised 1759, d. 1813) Lochhead, Marion (1902–85) MacKay, Barbara, Lady Reay (c. 1615–c. 1690) Mackellar, Mary (1834–1890) MacLeod, Fiona see Sharp, Elizabeth (1856–1932) MacLeod, Mary see Màiri nighean Alasdair Ruaidh (c. 1615–c. 1707) MacNeil, Aithbhreac see Aithbhreac inghean Coirceadail (fl. 1470) MacPherson, Mary see Màiri Mhòr nan Òran (1821–98) Macpherson, Mary see Clark, Mary (c. 1740–c. 1815) Mairearad nighean Lachlainn (b. c. 1660) Màiri Mhòr nan Òran (1821–98) Màiri nighean Alasdair Ruaidh (c. 1615–c. 1707) Maitland, Mary (Marie) (b. before 1586, d. 1596) Melville, Elizabeth (Lady Culross) (c. 1578–c. 1640) Milne, Agnes see Williamson, Euphemia (1846–1929) Milne, Christian see Chalmers, Margaret (b. c. 1758) Pagan, Isobel (1741–1821) Raine, Kathleen Jessie (1908–2003) Ransford, Tessa (1938–2015) Robertson, Edith Anne (1883–1973) Ross, Elizabeth (1789–1875) Russell, Jessie (1850–1923) Sackville, Lady Margaret see Symon, Mary (1863–1938) Saxby, Jessie (1842–1940) Scot, Elizabeth (1729–89) Scott-Moncrieff, Agnes (Ann) (1914–43) Sileas nighean mhic Raghnaill (c. 1660–c. 1729) Sinclair, Lise see Sutherland, Stella (1924–2015) Skene, Lilias (1626/7–97) Smith, Janet (1905–99) Spark, Muriel (1918–2006) Stewart, Helen D’Arcy (1765–1838) Stewart, Margaret (1424–45) Sutherland, Stella (1924–2015) Symon, Mary (1863–1938) Wells, Annie (Nannie) (1875–1963) Williamson, Euphemia (Effie) (1846–1929) Literature: religious (including hymns) Armstrong, Isabella see Macfarlane, Jessie (1843–71) Borthwick, Jane (1813–97)



Borthwick, Sarah see Borthwick, Jane (1813–97) Caddy, Eileen (1917–2006) Cairns, Elizabeth (1685–1741) Clephane, Elizabeth (1830–69) Collace, Jean see Collace, Katharine (c. 1635–c. 1697) Duncan, Isabelle (1812–78) Duncan, Mary (1814–40) Farquhar, Barbara (1815–75) Geddie, Emilia see Collace, Katharine (c. 1635–c. 1697) Halkett, Anne, Lady see Murray, Anne (1623–99) Hay, Helen, Countess of Linlithgow (b. before 1570, d. 1627) Leigh, Margaret (1894–1973) Linlithgow, Helen, Countess of see Hay, Helen (b. before 1570, d. 1627) Macdonald, Mary (1789–1872) Murray, Anne, Lady Halkett (1623–99) Peebles, Barbara (fl. 1660–66) Rutherford, Mistress (fl. 1610–30) West, Elizabeth see Cairns, Elizabeth (1685–1741) Literature: translation Borthwick, Jane (1813–97) Craigmyle, Elizabeth (Bessie) (1863–1933) Grant, Katherine (1845–1928) Laws, Margaret Troup (1849–1921) Macfarlane, Helen (1818–60) Raphael, Sylvia (1914–96) Somerville, Mary (1780–1872) Spence, Catharine (1823–1906) Stein, Grace see Wallace, Grace (1804–78) Stewart, Eleanor see Stewart, Margaret (1424–45) Stirling Graham, Clementina (1782–1877) Wallace, Grace (1804–78) Literature: travel Aust, Sarah (1744–1811) Balneaves, Elizabeth (1911–2006) Bird, Isabella (1831–1904) Blaze de Bury, Marie Pauline (c. 1813–c. 1894) Calderon de la Barca, Frances, Marquesa (1804–82) Calderwood, Margaret (1715–74) Callcott, Maria, Lady see Graham, Maria (1785–1842) Cobbold, Lady Evelyn (1867–1963) Cumming, Constance see Gordon-Cumming, Constance (1837–1924) Dixie, Florence (1855–1905) Donaldson, Mary (1876–1958) Eaton, Charlotte see Waldie, Charlotte (1788–1859) Gordon-Cumming, Constance Frederica (1837–1924) Graham, Maria (Lady Callcott) (1785–1842) Hutchison, Isobel Wylie (1889–1982) Lewis, Agnes (1843–1920) Murray, Sarah see Aust, Sarah (1744–1811)

481

Thematic Index

Waldie, Charlotte (1788–1859) Waldie, Jane see Waldie, Charlotte (1788–1859) White, Freda (1894–1971) Lovers, wives, mothers, family members Adam, Mary (1699–1761) Affrica (Aufrike) of Galloway (fl. 1114–30) Aife (of Alba) see Scáthach (of Skye) (fl. c. 500 bc) Armour, Jean (1765–1834) Beaton, Margaret see Chisholm, Jane (fl. 1542–57) Beaton, Mary see Maries, The Four (b. 16th century) Begg, Isabella (1771–1858) Boswell, Margaret (1738–89) Bowes, Marjory see Stewart, Margaret, of Ochiltree (c. 1548–1611) Boyd, Marion see Drummond, Margaret (b. before 1496, d. 1502) Braidfute, Marion (fl. 1297) Calder, Muriel (1498–1570s) Campbell, Katherine, Countess of Crawford (b. before 1538, d. 1578) Campbell, Margaret (Mary) (1766–86) Chiesley, Rachel, Lady Grange (d. 1745) Chisholm, Jane (Jean) (fl. 1542–57) Crichton, Margaret (c. 1483–c. 1546) Cumming Gordon, Helen see Cumming, Jane (1795/6–1844) Der-Ilei (fl. 685) Douglas, Alison (c. 1480–c. 1530) Douglas, Lady Frances (1750–1817) Douglas, Lady Jane (1698–1753) Douglas, Margaret (b. c. 1426, d. before 1475) Drummond, Margaret (b. before 1496, d. 1502) Dunbar, Elizabeth, Countess of Moray (c. 1425–c. 1494) Eliot, Grace Dalrymple (b. c. 1754, d. 1823) Fleming, Mary see Maries, The Four (b. 16th century) Forman, Jane see Chisholm, Jane (fl. 1542–57) Geddes, Anna (1857–1917) Gordon, Jane, Countess of Bothwell (1545–1629) Grange, Rachel, Lady see Chiesley, Rachel (d. 1745) Gunning, Elizabeth, Duchess of Hamilton (1733–90) Highland Mary see Campbell, Margaret (1766–86) Kennedy, Janet, Lady Bothwell (c. 1480–1547) Keppel, Alice Frederica (1868–1947) Livingston, Mary see Maries, The Four (b. 16th century) Macdonald, Margaret, of Sleat (d. 1799) Mackay, Janet (c. 1731–c. 1768) Mackenzie, Barbara, of Kintail (c. 1595–c. 1630) MacNeil, Aithbhreac see Aithbhreac inghean Coirceadail (fl. 1470) Maries, The Four (b. 16th century)



Menteith, Joanna, Countess of Strathearn (fl. 1323–66) Miller, Lydia Falconer (baptised 1812, d. 1876) Montgomerie, Margaret see Boswell, Margaret (1738–89) Mortimer, Katherine see Margaret Logie (c. 1330–c. 1373) Ogilvy of Melgund, Lady Marion (fl. 1503–75) Orabilis (or Orabila), Countess of Mar (fl. 1172) Raegnmaeld (fl. 650s) Stewart, Margaret (c. 1460–c. 1503) Stewart, Margaret, of Ochiltree (c. 1548–1611) Stewart, Margaret, Countess of Angus see Annabella Drummond (b. before 1367, d. 1401) Taneu (fl. 5th century) Thenew see Taneu (fl. 5th century) Walkinshaw, Clementina (c. 1720–1802) Mathematics Macintyre, Sheila (1910–60) Ross, Marion (1903–94) Sadler, Flora (1912–2000) Sang, Flora see Sidgwick, Eleanor (1845–1936) Sang, Jane see Sidgwick, Eleanor (1845–1936) Sidgwick, Eleanor (1845–1936) Somerville, Mary (1780–1872) Media: cinema Allan, Georgina (1913–69) Annand, Louise (1915–2012) Balneaves, Elizabeth (1911–2006) Biggar, Helen (1909–53) Cooper, Brigid (1913–83) Gilbertson, Jenny (1902–90) Grierson, Ruby (1903–40) Hood, Morag (1942–2002) Kerr, Deborah (1921–2007) Logan, Ella see Allan, Georgina (1913–69) Low, Helen (1886–1930) Mason, Eliot (1888–1947) Shearer, Moira (1926–2006) Tait, Margaret (1918–99) Taylor, Marion see Grierson, Ruby (1903–40) Urquhart, Mary (1906–77) Weir, Molly (1910–2004) Media: journalism Adam Smith, Janet see Smith, Janet (1905–99) Archdale, Helen (1876–1949) Bell, Lily see Pearce, Isabella (1859–1929) Bernstein, Marion (1847–1906) Blaze de Bury, Marie (c. 1813–c. 1894) Carswell, Catherine (1879–1946) Craig, Elizabeth (1883–1980) Fairfield, Cecily (1892–1983) Garrett, Edward see Mayo, Isabella (1843–1914)

482

Thematic Index



Grant, Beatrice (baptised 1761, d. 1845) Grieve, Jemima (1923–96) Grieve, Mary (1906–98) Haining, Jane (1897–1944) Hamilton, Mary (1882–1966) Hogg, Anna see Hogg, Jane (1834–1900) Hogg, Jane (1834–1900) Innes, Susan (Sue) (1948–2005) Johnstone, Christian (1781–1857) Lothian, Antonella (Tony), Marchioness of Lothian (1922–2007) Macfarlane, Helen (1818–60) Mayo, Isabella (1843–1914) Oliver, Cordelia (1923–2009) Phillips, Caroline (1870–1954) Shaw, Mary see Shaw, Clarice (1883–1946) Smith, Anne (1944–2013) Smith, Janet (1905–99) Spence, Catherine (1825–1910) Turberville, Ruby see Grieve, Mary (1906–98) West, Rebecca see Fairfield, Cecily (1892–1983) Wood, Wendy (1892–1981) Media: radio and television Adair, Elizabeth see Kesson, Jessie (1916–94) Barnett, Isobel, Lady (1918–80) Benzie, Isa see Somerville, Mary (1897–1963) Brown, Janet (1923–2011) Bulter, Rhoda (1929–94) Craig, Elizabeth (1883–1980) Dickson Wright, Clarissa (1947–2014) Garscadden, Kathleen (1897–1991) Hutchison, Isobel Wylie (1889–1982) Kesson, Jessie (1916–94) Knight, Margaret (1903–83) Morrison, Euphemia (1917–74) Orr, Christine (1899–1963) Somerville, Mary (1897–1963) Teissier du Cros, Janet (1905–90) Walton, Cecile (1891–1956) Weir, Molly (Mary) (1910–2004) Wood, Wendy (1892–1981) Medicine (see Health, healing, medicine) Military, war service – military and civilian Aife (of Alba) see Scáthach (of Skye) (fl. c. 500 bc) Allan, Agnes see Bletchley Park Women Recruits Anderson, Margaret (Betty) (1913–79) Barry, James (b. c. 1789, d. 1865) Beaty, Moira see Bletchley Park Women Recruits Beedie, Margaret see Bletchley Park Women Recruits Bletchley Park Women Recruits Brown, Irene see Bletchley Park Women Recruits Bruce, Christian (fl. 1306–57) Cameron, Jenny (b. c. 1698, d. 1772)



Campbell, Lady Agnes (c. 1525–c. 1601) Chisholm, Mairi (1896–1981) Comyn, Marjory, Countess of Dunbar (fl. 1290s) Crabbie, Iona see Bletchley Park Women Recruits Dunbar, Agnes, Countess of see Randolph, Agnes (b. before 1324, d. c. 1369) Dunnett, Isabella see Bletchley Park Women Recruits Fairlie, Alison see Bletchley Park Women Recruits Gillon, Mary (1898–2002) Gordon, Jane, Duchess of see Maxwell, Jane (b. c. 1749, d. 1812) Houston, Ethel see Bletchley Park Women Recruits Lilias of Ancrum (fl. 1545) Mackintosh, Lady Anne (1723–87) McLachlan, Cecile see Bletchley Park Women Recruits MacRuairi, Christiana, of the Isles (fl. 1290–1318) Maxwell, Jane, Duchess of Gordon (b. c. 1749, d. 1812) Meechie, Helen (1938–2000) Miller, Emily (1871–1962) O’Donnell, Finola (c. 1552–c. 1610) Ralphson, Mary (1698–1808) Randolph, Agnes (Black Agnes of Dunbar) (b. before 1324, d. c. 1369) Scáthach (of Skye) (fl. c. 500 bc) Scott Moncrieff, Ann see Bletchley Park Women Recruits Skinnider, Margaret (1892–1971) Smith, Dorothy see Bletchley Park Women Recruits Speirs, Vera (1921–95) Watson, Alexandra (Mona) (1872–1936) Missionaries Arnot, Agnes see Graham, Margaret (1860–1933) Graham, Margaret (1860–1933) Grant, Mary (1876–1957) Gregory, Helen (1898–1946) Haining, Jane (1897–1944) Hewat, Elizabeth (1895–1968) Laws, Margaret (1849–1921) McLaren, Agnes (1837–1913) Reekie, Stella (1922–82) Slessor, Mary (1848–1915) Small, Ann (Annie) (1857–1945) Smith, Christina (1809–93) Waterston, Jane (1843–1932) Wilson, Margaret (baptised 1795, d. 1835) Muses Campbell, Margaret (1766–86) Clarinda see McLehose, Agnes (‘Clarinda’) (1758–1841) Graham, Jane see Graham, Helen (1806–96) Highland Mary see Campbell, Margaret (1766–86)

483

Thematic Index

Lorimer, Jean (1775–1831) McLehose, Agnes (‘Clarinda’) (1758–1841) Music: collectors, sources Buchan, Jane (Janey) (1926–2012) Campbell of Canna, Margaret Fay Shaw see Shaw, Margaret (1903–2004) Campbell, Marion (1867–1970) Gilchrist, Anne (1863–1954) Hogg, Margaret see Laidlaw, Margaret (1730–1813) Kennedy-Fraser, Marjory (1857–1930) Laidlaw, Margaret (1730–1813) Liebenthal, Tertia (1889–1970) MacDonald, Catherine see Campbell, Marion (1867–1970) MacKinnon, Nan (1902–82) Montgomerie, Norah (1908–98) Munro, Ailie Edmunds (1919–2002) Nan Eachainn Fhionnlaigh see MacKinnon, Nan (1902–82) Ross, Elizabeth (1789–1875) Shaw, Margaret Fay (1903–2004) Shire, Helena (1912–91) Spottiswoode, Alicia (1810–1900) Stewart-Murray, Lady Dorothea (1866–1937) Stewart-Murray, Lady Evelyn (1868–1940) Stewart, Isabella (Belle) (1906–97) Stewart, Lucy (1901–82) Stirling, Jane (baptised 1804, d. 1859) Tolmie, Frances (1840–1926) Wemyss, Jean see Wemyss, Lady Margaret (1630–48) Wemyss, Lady Margaret (1630–48) Music: composers Bowes-Lyon, Lady Mildred (1868–97) Campbell, Mary (1812–86) Dare, Margaret (1902–76) Dunlop, Isobel (1901–75) Hopekirk, Helen (1856–1945) Scott, Isabella (1786–1838) Music: singers and instrumentalists Acquroff, Helen (1831–87) Allan, Georgina (1913–69) Baillie, Isobel (1895–1983) Broadwood, Lucy (1858–1929) Brown, Anna (1747–1810) Campbell, Marion (1867–1970) Chambers, Norah see Thomson, Margaret (1902–82) Christie, Madeleine (1904–96) Dare, Margaret (1902–76) Dickson, (Katherine) Joan (1921–94) Dickson, Hester see Dickson, (Katherine) (1921–94) Duncan, Agnes (1900–97) Fisher, Ray (1940–2011) Garden, Mary (1874–1967)



Gillespie, Margaret (1841–1913) Harris, Amelia (1815–91) Harris, Jane see Harris, Amelia (1815–91) Higgins, Lizzie see Robertson, Regina (1908–75) Hogg, Margaret see Laidlaw, Margaret (1730–1813) Hopekirk, Helen (1856–1945) Inverarity, Eliza (1813–46) Johnston, Anne (1886–1963) Kaye, Dinah (1924–2011) Kennedy-Fraser, Marjory (1857–1930) Kennedy-Fraser, Patuffa see Kennedy-Fraser, Marjory (1857–1930) Laidlaw, Margaret (1730–1813) Laidlaw, Robena (1819–1901) Loftus, Cecilia see Loftus, Marie (1857–1940) Loftus, Marie (1857–1940) Logan, Ella see Allan, Georgina (1913–69) Lyle, Agnes, of Kilbarchan (b. 1775, d. after 1825) MacAskill, Ishbel (1941–2011) MacDonald, Catherine see Campbell, Marion (1867–1970) McGowan, Mary see Kaye, Dinah (1924–2011) Mackenzie, Joan (1929–2007) MacKinnon, Nan (1902–82) MacLachlan, Jessie (1866–1916) MacLeod, Catherine (Kitty) (1914–2000) MacNeil, Flora (1928–2015) Meg of Abernethy (fl. 1390s) Nan Eachainn Fhionnlaigh see MacKinnon, Nan (1902–82) O’Rourke, Mary (1913–64) Paton, Mary (1802–64) Redpath, Jean (1937–2014) Robertson, Regina (Jeannie) (1908–75) Sampson, Margery (1890–1915) Stewart, Isabella (Belle) (1906–97) Stewart, Lucy (1901–82) Stewart, Sheila see Stewart, Isabella (Belle) (1906–97) Storie, Mary see Harris, Amelia (1815–91) Watson, Elizabeth (Bessie) (1900–92) Wemyss, Jean see Wemyss, Lady Margaret (1630–48) Whiskey, Nancy (1935–2003) Zavaroni, Lena (1963–99) Music: songwriters Acquroff, Helen (1831–87) Adam, Jean (1704–65) Barnard, Lady Anne (1750–1825) Brooksbank, Mary (1897–1978) Catriona nic Fhearghais (fl. 1745–6) Ceapaich, Sileas na see Sileas nighean mhic Raghnaill (c. 1660–c. 1729) Clephane, Elizabeth Cecilia (1830–69) Cockburn, Alison (1713–94)

484

Thematic Index



Cousin, Anne (1824–1906) Culross, Elizabeth, Lady see Melville, Elizabeth (c. 1578–c. 1640) Duncan, Mary (1814–40) Ferguson, Christiana see Catriona nic Fhearghais (fl. 1745–6) Glover, Jean (b. 1758, d. in or after 1801) Harris, Amelia (1815–91) Harris, Jane see Harris, Amelia (1815–91) Hunter, Anne (1742–1821) Irvine, Jessie (1836–87) Lyle, Agnes, of Kilbarchan (b. 1775, d. after 1825) MacDonald, Cicely see Sileas nighean mhic Raghnaill (c. 1660–c. 1729) Macdonald, Mary (1789–1872) Melville, Elizabeth (Lady Culross) (c. 1578–c. 1640) Nairne, Carolina, Lady see Oliphant, Carolina (1766–1845) Oliphant, Carolina, Lady Nairne (1766–1845) Pagan, Isobel (1741–1821) Rutherford, Alison see Cockburn, Alison (1713–94) Sileas nighean mhic Raghnaill (c. 1660–c. 1729) Spottiswoode, Alicia (1810–1900) Stewart, Isabella (Belle) (1906–97) Watson, Jean see Keddie, Henrietta (1827–1914) Myth and legend/fictional Aife (of Alba) see Scáthach (of Skye) (fl. c. 500 bc) Barlass, Kate see Douglas, Katharine (fl. 1437) Braidfute, Marion (fl. 1297) Broon, Maw (b. 1936) Geddes, Jenny (fl. 1670) Horne, Janet (d. 1722 or 1727) Lilias of Ancrum (fl. 1545) Scáthach (of Skye) (fl. c. 500 BC ) Scota (fl. c. 500 BC ) Patronage Balliol, Dervorgilla see Galloway, Dervorgilla of (b. c. 1213, d. 1290) Black, Barbara see Blackwell, Elizabeth (baptised 1707–d. c. 1758) Campbell, Jane, Lady Kenmure (b. before 1607, d. 1675) Cunningham, Elizabeth, Countess of Glencairn (1724–1801) Dunbar, Elizabeth, Countess of Moray (c. 1425–c. 1494) Dunlop, Frances (1730–1815) Eglinton, Susanna, Countess of see Montgomerie, Susanna (1689/90–1780) Fletcher, Elizabeth (1731–58) Galloway, Dervorgilla of (b. c. 1213–d. 1290) Gardiner, Margaret (1904–2005) Hepburn, Jane, Lady Seton (c. 1480–c. 1558)



Keiller, Gabrielle (1908–95) Kenmure, Jane, Lady see Campbell, Jane (b. before 1607, d. 1675) Lauderdale, Elizabeth, Duchess of see Murray, Lady Elizabeth (baptised 1626, d. 1698) Mackenzie, Penelope (b. c. 1675, d. 1743) Mary of Guelders, Queen of Scotland (b. c. 1433, d. 1463) Montgomerie, Susanna (1689/90–1780) Murray, Lady Elizabeth, Countess of Dysart (baptised 1626, d. 1698) Orabilis, Countess of Mar (fl. 1172) Rynd, Janet (c. 1504–53) Stewart, Isabella see Stewart, Margaret (1424–45) Stirling, Jane Wilhelmina (baptised 1804, d. 1859) Warenne, Ada de (c. 1123–c. 1178) Performing arts: acting Baker, Elizabeth (d. 1778) Ballantyne, Nellie (1898–1959) Brown, Janet (1923–2011) Christie, Madeleine (1904–96) Deans, Charlotte (1768–1859) Fraser, Annie see Fraser, Helen (1881–1979) Fraser, Jessie (b. c. 1801, d. 1875) Glover, Jean (b. 1758, d. in or after 1801) Gordon, Mary (1882–1963) Gray, Elspet (1929–2013) Hesketh, Marianne (1930–84) Hood, Morag (1942–2002) Houston, Catherine (1902–80) Houston, Sarah (Billie) see Houston, Catherine (1902–80) Loftus, Cecilia see Loftus, Marie (1857–1940) McCrindle, Jennifer (1968–2014) MacLennan, Elizabeth (1938–2015) Mason, Eliot (1888–1947) Milne, Lennox (1909–80) Moffat, Maggie (1873–1943) Ruddick, Edith (1918–96) Shearer, Moira (1926–2006) Siddons, Harriet (1783–1844) Ure, Mary (1933–75) Urquhart, Mary (1906–77) Violante, Signora, Mariana (1682–1741) Ward, Sarah (1726/7–71) Weir, Mary (1910–2004) Performing arts: dance Davison, Euphemia (1906–96) Johnstone, Rona see Johnstone, Dorothy (1892–1980) McLean, Agnes (1918–94) Milligan, Jean (1886–1978) Morris, Margaret (1891–1980) Moxon, May see Davison, Euphemia (1906–96)

485

Thematic Index

Shearer, Moira (1926–2006) Stewart, Ysobel see Milligan, Jean (1886–1978) Violante, Signora, Mariana (1682–1741) Performing arts: theatre production, management, design Aitken, Sarah (1905–85) Biggar, Helen (1909–53) Dence, Marjorie (1901–66) Fraser, Jessie (b. c. 1801, d. 1875) Hesketh, Marianne (1930–84) Knight, Joan (1924–96) MacLennan, Elizabeth (1938–2015) Mason, Eliot (1888–1947) Milne, Lennox (1909–80) Orr, Christine (1899–1963) Siddons, Harriet (1783–1844) Urquhart, Mary (1906–77) Waddell, Janet see Waddell, Roberta (1907–80) Waddell, Roberta (1907–80) Ward, Sarah (1726/7–71) Weir, Sharman (1959–99) Performing arts: variety Clark, Grace (1905–95) Droy, Doris see Clark, Grace (1905–95) Houston, Catherine (Renee) (1902–80) Houston, Sarah see Houston, Catherine (1902–80) Loftus, Cecilia see Loftus, Marie (1857–1940) Loftus, Marie (1857–1940) O’Rourke, Mary (1913–64) Short, May see Allan, Georgina (1913–69) Philanthropy Aberdeen and Temair, Ishbel, Marchioness of (Lady Aberdeen) (1857–1939) Baxter, Mary Ann (1801–84) Blaikie, Margaret see Macpherson, Annie (1825–1904) Brown, Meredith (1846–1908) Campbell, Lady Victoria see Grant, Katherine (1845–1928) Carnegie, Susan (1743–1821) Cheape, Lady Griselda (1865–1934) Clugston, Beatrice (1827–88) Crichton, Elizabeth (1779–1862) Croall, Annie (1854–1927) Dunmore, Catherine, Countess of see Murray, Catherine (1814–86) Elder, Isabella (1828–1905) Erskine, Mary (1629–1707) Fletcher, Eliza (1770–1858) Forbes, Katherine (c. 1583–c. 1652) Forrester-Paton, Catherine (1855–1914) Graham, Violet, Duchess of Montrose (1854–1940) Gray, Elspet (1929–2013) Hamilton, Anne, 3rd Duchess of (1632–1716)



Hardy, Lileen see Maclagan, Mary (1853–1943) Hay, Jane (1864–1914) Johnstone, Caroline (1849–1929) Keir, Elizabeth (1750s–1834) Kerr, Helen see Maclagan, Mary (1853–1943) MacLagan, Christian (1811–1901) Maclagan, Mary (1853–1943) Macpherson, Annie (1825–1904) Macquarie, Elizabeth (1778–1835) Maxwell, Darcy (1742–1810) Montrose, Violet, Duchess of see Graham, Violet (1854–1940) Moore, Jane (b. c. 1635, d. 1695)) Murray, Catherine, Countess of Dunmore (1814–86) Paton, Fenella (1901–49) Rothiemay, Katherine, Lady see Forbes, Katherine (c. 1583–c. 1652) Sinclair, Catherine (1800–64) Stirling, Emma (c. 1838–1907) Tait Black, Janet (1844–1918) Tollemache, Elizabeth, Duchess of Argyll (1659–1735) Philosophy, history of ideas Clapperton, Jane (1832–1914) Hamilton, Elizabeth (1758–1816) Shepherd, Lady Mary (1777–1847) Photography Chisholm, Mairi (1896–1981) Donaldson, Mary (1876–1958) Hawarden, Viscountess Clementina (1822–65) Mann, Janet (1805–67) Moberg, Gun (1941–2007) Raffles, Frances (Franki) (1955–94) So, Pamela (1947–2010) Sulter, Maud (1960–2008) Watkins, Margaret (1884–1969) Physics Ross, Marion (1903–94) Somerville, Mary (1780–1872) Police, prison staff Curran, Agnes (1920–2005) Grant, Mary (1876–1957) Hannay, Jane (1868–1938) Miller, Emily (1871–1962) Thomson, Helen (1883–1973) Urquhart, Margery (1912–2007) Politics and public life: dynastic Aelffled (c. 654–c. 713) Aife (of Alba) see Scáthach (of Skye) (fl. c. 500 bc) Alchfled (fl. 653–6) Anna of Denmark, Queen of Scotland (1574–1619) Annabella Drummond, Queen of Scotland (b. before 1367, d. 1401)

486

Thematic Index



Argyll, Anna, Countess of see MacKenzie, Anna (1621–1707) Balcarres, Anna, Countess of see MacKenzie, Anna (1621–1707) Balliol, Dervorgilla see Galloway, Dervorgilla of (b. c. 1213, d. 1290) Bohemia, Elizabeth, Queen of see Stewart, Elizabeth (1596–1662) Bruce, Christian (fl. 1306–57) Bruce, Isabella see Isabella Bruce (1272–1358) Bruce, Marjory (1294–c. 1317) Buccleuch, Anna, Duchess of see Scott, Anna (1651–1732) Buchan, Isobel, Countess of see Fife, Isobel of (c. 1285–c. 1314) Carrick, Marjory, Countess of (fl. 1256–92) Comyn, Agnes, Countess of Strathearn (fl. 1296–1320) Comyn, Marjory, Countess of Dunbar (fl. 1290s) Douglas, Isabella, Countess of Mar see Annabella Drummond (b. before 1367, d. 1401) Douglas, Lady Margaret, Countess of Lennox (1515–78) Douglas, Margaret (b. c. 1426, d. before 1475) Dunbar, Elizabeth (fl. 1395–1438) Elizabeth de Burgh, Queen of Scotland (d. 1327) Euphemia of Ross, Queen of Scotland (b. c. 1329, d. 1388 /9) Fife, Isobel of, Countess of Buchan (c. 1285–c. 1314) Galloway, Dervorgilla of (b. c. 1213, d. 1290) Gordon, Jane, Countess of Bothwell (1545–1629) Gruoch, Queen of Scotland (fl. Early/mid-11th century) Ingibjorg, Queen of Scotland (fl. c. 1025–58?) Isabella Bruce, Queen of Norway (1272–1358) Isabella of Fife see Fife, Isobel of (c. 1285–c. 1314) Isabella of Scotland, Countess of Norfolk see Margaret of Scotland (b. before 1195, d. 1270) Isabella, Countess of Lennox see Joan Beaufort (d. 1445) Iurminburg (fl. 672–685) Joan Beaufort, Queen of Scotland (d. 1445) Joan of England, Queen of Scotland (1210–38) Joan of the Tower, Queen of Scotland see Margaret Logie (c. 1330–c. 1373) MacBeth, Lady see Gruoch (fl. early/mid-11th century) MacKenzie, Anna, Countess of Balcarres (1621–1707) MacRuairi, Amy (fl. 1318–50) MacRuairi, Christiana, of the Isles (fl. 1290–1318) Madeleine of France see Mary of Guise (1515–60) Mar, Annabella, Countess of see Murray, Annabella (1536–1603) Margaret Logie, Queen of Scotland (c. 1330–c. 1373)



Margaret of Denmark, Queen of Scotland (c. 1457–c. 1486) Margaret of England, Queen of Scotland see Joan of England (1210–38) Margaret of Scotland the younger see Margaret of Scotland (b. before 1195, buried 1259) Margaret of Scotland, Countess of Kent (b. before 1195, buried 1259) Margaret Tudor, Queen of Scotland (1489–1541) Margaret, ‘Maid of Norway’ (c. 1282–90) Margaret, Saint, Queen of Scotland (c. 1046–c. 1093) Mary of Boulogne see Matilda of Scotland (c. 1080–c. 1118) Mary of Guelders, Queen of Scotland (b. c. 1433, d. 1463) Mary of Guise, Queen of Scotland (1515–60) Mary, Queen of Scots (1542–87) Matilda (Edith) of Scotland (c. 1080–c. 1118) Maud (Matilda) de Senlis, Queen of Scotland (b. c. 1071, d. 1131) Murray, Annabella, Countess of Mar (1536–1603) Osthryð (fl. AD 675–97) Ross, Euphemia, Countess of see Euphemia of Ross (b. c. 1329, d. 1388 /9) Scott, Anna, Duchess of Buccleuch (1651–1732) Scott, Jean (Janet), Lady Ferniehirst (c. 1548–c. 1595) Stewart, Annabella see Stewart, Margaret (1424–45) Stewart, Elizabeth, Queen of Bohemia (1596–1662) Stewart, Margaret, Countess of Angus see Annabella Drummond (b. before 1367, d. 1401) Stewart, Mary (b. before 1452, d. c. 1488) Tomnat (d. probably AD 695) Walkinshaw, Clementina (b. c. 1720, d. 1802) Warenne, Ada de (c. 1123–c. 1178) Politics and public life: labour movement and ­socialism Abbot, Frances see Rae, Jane (1872–1959) Adamson, Janet (1882–1962) Allan, Janie (1868–1968) Barbour, Mary (1875–1958) Brooksbank, Mary (1897–1978) Brown, Betty (1928–2016) Buchan, Jane (Janey) (1926–2012) Crawfurd, Helen (1877–1954) Dawson, Ellen (1900–67) Devine, Rachel (1875–1960) Docherty, Mary (1908–2002) Dollan, Agnes, Lady (1887–1966) Fenwick, Margaret (1919–92) Findlay, Jessie (1898–1989) Fish, Elizabeth (1860–1944) Hardie, Agnes (1874–1951) Henery, Marion (1910–2001)

487

Thematic Index

Irwin, Margaret (1858–1940) Kerrigan, Rose (1903–95) Legge, Isabella (1812–84) Lennox, Agnes (fl. 1839–1841) Lindsay, Anna see Irwin, Margaret (1858–1940) Macarthur, Mary (1880–1921) McCallum, Janet (1881–1946) McDonald, Camelia (1909–60) Macfarlane, Helen (1818–60) McGuire, Violet see Swankie, Emily (1915–2008) McLean, Agnes (1918–94) McMillan, Margaret (1860–1931) McMillan, Rachel see McMillan, Margaret (1860–1931) MacPherson, Margaret (1908–2001) Muir, Miss see Lennox, Agnes (fl. 1839–41) Patrick, Jane see McDonald, Camelia (1909–60) Pearce, Isabella (1859–1929) Rae, Jane (1872–1959) Robinson, Annot see Wilkie, Annot (1874–1925) Rooney, Maureen (1947–2003) Shaw, Clarice (1883–1946) Stephen, Jessie (1893–1979) Sutherland, Mary (1895–1972) Swankie, Emily (1915–2008) Wilkie, Annot (1874–1925) Wright, Camilla see Wright, Frances (1795–1852) Wright, Frances (1795–1852) Politics and public life: local government Barbour, Mary (1875–1958) Brown, Betty (1928–2016) Burnley Campbell, Margaret (1858–1938) Clunas, Maggie (Lila) (1876–1968) Crichton, Margaret (c. 1483–c. 1546) Dollan, Agnes, Lady (1887–1966) Geddes, Margaret see Watson, Alexandra (1872–1936) Grimond, Laura (1918–94) Hay, Jane (1864–1914) Hughes, Agnes (1885–1947) Hunter, Allison (1942–2013) Husband, Ann (1852–1929) Jamieson, Christina (1864–1942) McLean, Agnes (1918–94) Malcolm, Lavinia (1847–1920) Millar, Ella (1869–1959) Mitchison, Naomi (1897–1999) Paterson-Brown, June (1932–2009) Rae, Jane (1872–1959) Roberts, Jean (1895–1988) Schireham, Marjory de (fl. 1326–31) Shaw, Clarice (1883–1946) Skinner, Mabel (1912–96) Somerville, Euphemia (1860–1935) Swankie, Emily (1915–2008)

Walker, Mary Lily (1863–1913) Wood Allen, Jenny (1911–2010) Politics and public life: (other) Chalmers Smith, Dorothea see Smith, Dorothea (1872–1944) Atholl, Katherine, Duchess of see Hamilton, Katherine (1662–1707) Burnley Campbell, Margaret (1858–1938) Campbell, Lady Agnes (c. 1525–c. 1601) Clanranald, Margaret, Lady see MacLeod, Margaret (b. before 1720, d. 1780) Douglas, Janet, Lady Glamis (b. c. 1504, d. 1537) Drummond, Jane, Countess of Roxburghe (b. in or before 1585, d. 1643) Dunbar, Agnes, Countess of see Randolph, Agnes (b. before 1324, d. c. 1369) Ermengarde de Beaumont, Queen of Scotland (c. 1166–1233) Erskine, Lady Mary see Fletcher, Christian (fl. 1619/20–91) Gillespie, Lilias see Skene, Lilias (1626/7–97) Glamis, Janet, Lady see Douglas, Janet (b. c. 1504, d. 1537) Gordon, Henrietta, Duchess of (1681–1760) Gordon, Jane, Duchess of see Maxwell, Jane (b. c. 1749, d. 1812) Haliburton, Marion, Lady Home (c. 1500–c. 1563) Hamilton, Anne, 3rd Duchess of (1632–1716) Hamilton, Katherine, Duchess of Atholl (1662–1707) Hamilton, Margaret, Countess of Panmure (1668–1731) Keith, Annas, Countess of Moray, Countess of Argyll (d. 1588) Lauderdale, Elizabeth, Duchess of see Murray, Lady Elizabeth (baptised 1626, d. 1698) Linklater, Marjorie (1909–97) MacDonald, Flora (1722–90) Macdonald, Margaret, of Sleat (d. 1799) MacKay, Barbara, Lady Reay (c. 1615–c. 1690) MacLeod, Flora (1878–1976) MacLeod, Margaret, Lady Clanranald (b. before 1720, d. 1780) Macquarie, Elizabeth (1778–1835) Mann, Selma (1892–1989) Maxwell, Lady Winifred, Countess of Nithsdale (1672–1749) Millar, Robina see Cullen, Margaret (1767–1837) Montrose, Violet, Duchess of see Graham, Violet (1854–1940) Murray, Lady Elizabeth, Countess of Dysart (baptised 1626, d. 1698) Nithsdale, Winifred, Countess of see Maxwell, Lady Winifred (1672–1749)

488

Thematic Index



O’Donnell, Finola (c. 1552–c. 1610) Panmure, Margaret, Countess of see Hamilton, Margaret (1668–1731) Peebles, Barbara (fl. 1660–66) Randolph, Agnes (Black Agnes of Dunbar) (b. before 1324, d. c. 1369) Skene, Lilias (1626/7–97) Stewart, Eleanor see Stewart, Margaret (1424–45) Stewart, Elizabeth, Countess of Arran (c. 1554–c. 1595) Wallace, Lady Eglinton (b. c. 1754, d. 1803) White, Freda (1894–1971) Politics and public life: pacifism Barbour, Mary (1875–1958) Brown, Betty (1928–2016) Caird, Alice (1854–1932) Carmichael, Kay (1925–2009) Crawfurd, Helen (1877–1954) Dollan, Agnes, Lady (1887–1966) Grierson, Ruby (1903–40) Hamilton, Mary (1882–1966) Hardie, Agnes (1874–1951) Harrison, Margaret (1918–2015) Hart, Jennifer (Maidie) (1916–97) Hughes, Agnes (1885–1947) Macmillan, Chrystal (1872–1937) Robinson, Annot see Wilkie, Annot (1874–1925) Sackville, Lady Margaret see Symon, Mary (1863–1938) Sievwright, Margaret Home (1844–1905) Steven, Helen (1942–2016) Warenne, Ada de (c. 1123–c. 1178) White, Freda (1894–1971) Wigham, Eliza (1820–99) Wilkie, Annot (1874–1925) Politics and public life: parliamentary and party political Adamson, Janet (1882–1962) Anderson, Margaret, Baroness Skrimshire (1913–79) Asquith, Emma (Margot) (1864–1945) Atholl, Katharine, Duchess of (1874–1960) Bain, Margaret see Ewing, Margaret (1945–2006) Buchan, Priscilla, Lady Tweedsmuir (1915–78) Campbell, Wilhelmina (1901–83) Cowan, Minna (1878–1951) Cullen, Alice (1891–1969) Drummond, Cherry, (Lady Strange) see Drummond, Victoria (1894–1978) Ewing, Margaret (1945–2006) Fraser, Helen (1881–1979) Grimond, Laura (1918–94) Hamilton, Mary (1882–1966) Hardie, Agnes (1874–1951) Hart, Constance (Judith) (1924–91)



Henery, Marion (1910–2001) Herbison, Margaret (Peggy) (1907–96) Horsbrugh, Florence, Baroness Horsbrugh (1889–1969) Hunter, Allison (1942–2013) Hunter, Margaret (1922–86) Kerrigan, Rose (1903–95) Lee, Janet (Jennie), Baroness of Asheridge (1904–88) McAlister, Mary (1896–1976) Macarthur, Mary (1880–1921) MacDonald, Margo (1943–2014) McLean, Agnes (1918–94) Mann, Janet (1899–1964) Michie, Janet Ray (1934–2008) Paton, Fenella (1901–49) Shaw, Clarice (1883–1946) Shaw, Helen (1879–1964) Skinner, Mabel (1912–96) Sutherland, Mary (1895–1972) Tweedsmuir, Priscilla, Lady see Buchan, Priscilla (1915–78) Politics and public life: Scottish nationalists Bain, Margaret see Ewing, Margaret (1945–2006) Campbell, Wilhelmina (1901–83) Ewing, Margaret (1945–2006) Hunter, Allison (1942–2013) MacDonald, Margo (1943–2014) McNeill, Florence (1885–1973) Matheson, Kay (1928–2013) Wells, Annie (Nannie) (1875–1963) Wood, Wendy (1892–1981) Politics and public life: suffrage Allan, Janie (1868–1968) Archdale, Helen (1876–1949) Arthur, Jane (1827–1907) Balfour, Lady Frances (1858–1931) Bell, Lily see Pearce, Isabella (1859–1929) Billington-Greig, Teresa (1876–1964) Blair, Catherine (1872–1946) Brown, Agnes see Blair, Catherine (1872–1946) Brown, Jessie see Blair, Catherine (1872–1946) Cadell, Grace (1855–1918) Chalmers Smith, Dorothea see Smith, Dorothea (1872–1944) Cheape, Lady Griselda (1865–1934) Clapperton, Jane (1832–1914) Clunas, Maggie (Lila) (1876–1968) Cook, Rachel see Lumsden, Louisa (1840–1935) Crawfurd, Helen (1877–1954) Drummond, Flora (1878–1949) Dunlop, Marion Wallace- see Wallace-Dunlop, Marion (1864–1942) Fraser, Annie see Fraser, Helen (1881–1979)

489

Thematic Index



Fraser, Helen (1881–1979) Gilchrist, Marion (1864–1952) Graham, Violet, Duchess of Montrose (1854–1940) Grant, Mary (1876–1957) Husband, Ann (1852–1929) Irwin, Margaret (1858–1940) Jamieson, Christina (1864–1942) Jones, Mabel see Cadell, Grace (1855–1918) Ker, Alice (1853–1943) Lumsden, Louisa (1840–1935) Macbeth, Ann (1875–1948) McCallum, Janet (1881–1946) Macdonald, Agnes (1882–1966) McLaren, Priscilla (1815–1906) Macmillan, Chrystal (1872–1937) Malcolm, Lavinia (1847–1920) Masson, Flora see Masson, Rosaline (1867–1949) Masson, Rosaline (1867–1949) Melville, Frances (1873–1962) Mitchell, Lillias (1884–1940) Moffat, Maggie (1873–1943) Moorhead, Ethel (1869–1955) Munro, Anna (1881–1962) Murray, Eunice (1878–1960) Murray, Flora (1869–1923) Murray, Frances (1843–1919) Murray, Sylvia see Murray, Eunice (1878–1960); Murray, Frances (1843–1919) Mylne, Margaret (1806–92) Nichol, Elizabeth (1807–97) Orme, Emily see Masson, Rosaline (1867–1949) Parker, Frances see Moorhead, Ethel (1869–1955) Pearce, Isabella (1859–1929) Phillips, Caroline (1870–1954) Phillips, Mary (1880–1969) Reid, Marion (1815–1902) Robinson, Annot see Wilkie, Annot (1874–1925) Sheppard, Catherine (1848–1934) Sievwright, Margaret (1844–1905) Smeal, Jane see Wigham, Eliza (1820–99) Smith, Dorothea (1872–1944) Stephen, Jessie (1893–1979) Stevenson, Flora (1839–1905) Stevenson, Louisa see Stevenson, Flora (1839–1905) Stopes, Charlotte (1840–1929) Taylour, Jane (1827–1905) Thomson, Elizabeth (1847–1918) Tod, Isabella (1836–96) Wallace-Dunlop, Marion (1864–1942) Watson, Elizabeth (Bessie) (1900–92) Wigham, Eliza (1820–99) Wilkie, Annot (1874–1925) Wilkie, Helen see Wilkie, Annot (1874–1925)

Politics and public life: women’s movement (other than suffrage), women’s rights Abbott, Wilhelmina (Elizabeth) (1884–1957) Aberdeen and Temair, Ishbel Maria Gordon, Marchioness of (Lady Aberdeen) (1857–1939) Burton, Mary (1819–1909) Caird, Alice Mona (1854–1932) Carmichael, Kay (1925–2009) Charteris, Catherine (1837–1918) Craig, Isa (1831–1903) Crudelius, Mary (1839–77) Daniell, Madeline (1832–1906) Esslemont, Mary (1891–1984) Forster, Jacqueline (Jackie) (1926–98) Gordon, Maria (1864–1939) Haldane, Elizabeth (1862–1937) Hart, Jennifer (Maidie) (1916–97) Innes, Katherine see Burton, Mary Rose (1857–1900) Jex-Blake, Sophia (1840–1912) Kenmure, Vera (1904–73) Keyzer, Isabella (1922–92) Knight, Margaret (1903–83) Lothian, Antonella (Tony), Marchioness of Lothian (1922–2007) Macfarlane, Jessie (1843–71) Mair, Sarah Siddons (1846–1941) Masson, Flora see Masson, Rosaline (1867–1949) Masson, Rosaline (1867–1949) Melville, Frances (1873–1962) Munro, Anna (1881–1962) Orme, Emily see Masson, Rosaline (1867–1949) Sheppard, Catherine (1848–1934) Skea, Isabella (1845–1914) Spence, Catherine (1825–1910) Stopes, Charlotte (1840–1929) Taylour, Jane (1827–1905) Tod, Isabella (1836–96) Wood Allen, Jenny (1911–2010) Wright, Camilla see Wright, Frances (1795–1852) Wright, Frances (1795–1852) Printing, publishing Brechin, Ethel (1894–1986) Burkhauser, Jude see Glasgow Girls (c. 1880–c. 1920) Campbell, Agnes (baptised 1637, d. 1716) Inglis, Esther (b. c. 1569, d. 1624) Macdonald, Ann (1849–1924) Miller, Lydia (baptised 1812, d. 1876) Moorhead, Ethel (1869–1955) Raine, Kathleen (1908–2003) Ransford, Tessa (1938–2015) Sharp, Elizabeth (1856–1932) Smith, Anne (1944–2013) Tait Black, Janet (1844–1918)

490

Thematic Index

Trail, Susan (baptised 1720, d. 1791) Wolfe Murray, Stephanie (1941–2017) Professions (other than named) Campbell, Jane (1869–1947) Greig, Flos see Greig, Jane (1872–1939) Lowe, Helen (1897–1997) Psychology, psychiatry Hamilton, Agnes (b. c. 1794, d. 1870) Knight, Margaret (1903–83) Wolff, Sulammith (1924–2009) Public service, including civil service (see also Voluntary service) Baird, Matilda (1901–83) Bryans, Anne (1919–2004) Carmichael, Kay (1925–2009) Fraser, Lady Marion (1932–2016) Hamilton, Agnes (b. c. 1794, d. 1870) Lothian, Antonella (Tony), Marchioness of Lothian (1922–2007) McKay, Ailsa (1963–2014) Mitchell, Elizabeth (1880–1980) Strathie, Dame Lesley (1955–2012) Religion: ministry Armstrong, Isabella see Macfarlane, Jessie (1843–71) Barr, Rev. Elizabeth (1905–95) Hewat, Elizabeth (1895–1968) Kenmure, Vera (1904–73) Levison, Mary (1923–2011) Macfarlane, Jessie (1843–71) Malloch, Elizabeth (1910–2000) Maxwell, Alice (1856–1915) Skelton, Pamela (1938–2014) Soule, Caroline (1824–1903) Wigham, Elizabeth (1748–1827) Religion/faith (see also Missionaries) Aeðilthryð (d. 679) Aebbe (d. c. 684) Aelffled (c. 654–c. 713) Alexander, Helen (c. 1653/4–1729) Alison, Isabel see McLachlan, Margaret (b. c. 1614) Althaus-Reid, Marcella (1952–2009) Armstrong, Isabella see Macfarlane, Jessie (1843–71) Baillie, Lady Grisell (1822–91) Balfour, Lady Frances (1858–1931) Balliol, Dervorgilla see Galloway, Dervorgilla of (b. c. 1213, d. 1290) Barr, Rev. Elizabeth (1905–95) Bethoc (Beatrice) daughter of Somerled (d. c. 1207) Bowes, Marjory see Stewart, Margaret (c. 1548–1611) Bride (Bridget), Saint (b. c. 452, d. 525) Bryson, Agnes (b. c. 1831, d. 1907) Buchan, Elspeth (1740–91) Caddy, Eileen (1917–2006)



Campbell, Jane, Lady Kenmure (b. before 1607, d. 1675) Campbell, Willielma, Lady Glenorchy (1741–86) Carrick, Ellen (c. 1342–c. 1408) Charteris, Catherine (1837–1918) Clarkson, Bessie (d. 1625) Clephane, Elizabeth (1830–69) Cobbold, Lady Evelyn (1867–1963) Collace, Katharine (c. 1635–c. 1697) Cousin, Anne Ross (1824–1906) Culross, Elizabeth, Lady see Melville, Elizabeth (c. 1578–c. 1640) Cuthburh (fl. 697–705) Drummond, May (c. 1710–72) Dunbar, Elizabeth (fl. 1395–1438) Duncan, Mary (1814–40) Eanfled (b. 626m, d. after 685) Forrester, Isobel (1895–1976) Fraser, Lady Marion (1932–2016) Galloway, Dervorgilla of (Dervorgilla Balliol) (b. c. 1213, d. 1290) Geddes, Jenny (fl. 1670) Geddie, Emilia see Collace, Katharine (c. 1635–c. 1697) Gillespie, Lilias see Skene, Lilias (1626/7–97) Glenorchy, Willielma, Lady see Campbell, Willielma (1741–86) Guthrie, Helen (b. 1574) Harvey, Marion see McLachlan, Margaret (b. c. 1614) Hay, Helen, Countess of Linlithgow (b. before 1570, d. 1627) Hepburn, Anne (1925–2016) Hepburn, Jane, Lady Seton (c. 1480–c. 1558) Hoppringle, Isabella (d. 1538) Huntly, Henrietta, Countess of see Stewart, Henrietta (1573–1642) Irvine, Jessie (1836–87) Kenmure, Jane, Lady see Campbell, Jane (b. before 1607, d. 1675) Knight, Margaret (1903–83) Lamb, Elizabeth see Hoppringle, Isabella (d. 1538) Lamond, Mary (1862–1949) Leslie, Euphemia (b. c. 1508, d. 1570) Linlithgow, Helen, Countess of see Hay, Helen (b. before 1570, d. 1627) Macgregor, Margaret (baptised 1838, d. 1901) Mackenzie, Penelope (b. c. 1675, d. 1743) McLachlan, Margaret (b. c. 1614) Margaret, Saint, Queen of Scotland (b. probably 1046, d. 1093) Mary, Queen of Scots (1542–87) Matilda (Edith) of Scotland (c. 1080–c. 1118) Maxwell, Darcy (1742–1810) Melville, Elizabeth (Lady Culross) (c. 1578–c. 1640)

491

Thematic Index



Mitchel, Margaret (fl. 1638) Peebles, Barbara (fl. 1660–66) Pringle, Janet see Hoppringle, Isabella (d. 1538) Reekie, Stella (1922–82) Ross, Katharine see Collace, Katharine (c. 1635–c. 1697) Rushforth, Winifred (1885–1983) Rutherford, Mistress (b. 1600s, d. after 1633) Ruthven, Katherine, Lady Glenorchy (d. 1584) Scott, Jean, Lady Ferniehirst (c. 1548–c. 1595) Seton, Mary see Maries, The Four (b. 16th century) Sinclair, Margaret (1900–25) Skene, Lilias (1626/7–97) Smith, Christina (1809–93) Soule, Caroline (1824–1903) Stewart, Henrietta, Countess of Huntly (1573–1642) Stewart, Margaret, of Ochiltree (c. 1548–1611) Stirk (Stark), Hellen (d. 1544) Taneu (fl. 5th century) Templeton, Elizabeth (1945–2015) Thenew see Taneu (fl. 5th century) Trail, Ann (1798–1872) Triduana (fl. between 6th and 8th centuries) Veitch, Marion (1638–1722) Walker, Marion (fl. 1597–1614) Warenne, Ada de (c. 1123–c. 1178) White, Mary see Bryson, Agnes (b. c. 1831, d. 1907) Wigham, Eliza (1820–99) Wigham, Elizabeth (1748–1827) Wilson, Agnes see McLachlan, Margaret (b. c. 1614) Wilson, Margaret see McLachlan, Margaret (b. c. 1614) Royalty Aeðilthryð (d. 679) Affrica (Aufrike) of Galloway (fl. 1114–30) Alchfled (fl. 653–6) Anna of Denmark, Queen of Scotland (1574–1619) Annabella Drummond, Queen of Scotland (b. before 1367, d. 1401) Bohemia, Elizabeth, Queen of see Stewart, Elizabeth (1596–1662) Bruce, Isabella see Isabella Bruce (1272–1358) Bruce, Marjory (1294–c. 1317) Coblaith (d. 690) Cuthburh (fl. 697–705) Der-Ilei (fl. 685) Douglas, Lady Margaret, Countess of Lennox (1515–78) Eanfled (b. 626, d. after 685) Elizabeth Angela Marguerite, Queen and Queen Mother (1900–2002) Elizabeth de Burgh, Queen of Scotland (d. 1327) Ermengarde de Beaumont, Queen of Scotland (c. 1166–1233)



Euphemia of Ross, Queen of Scotland (b. c. 1329, d. 1388/9) Gruoch, Queen of Scotland (Lady Macbeth) (fl. early/mid-11th century) Ingibjorg, Queen of Scotland (fl. c. 1025–58?) Isabella Bruce, Queen of Norway (1272–1358) Isabella of Scotland, Countess of Norfolk see Margaret of Scotland (b. before 1195, d. 1270) Iurminburg (fl. 672–85) Joan Beaufort, Queen of Scotland (d. 1445) Joan of England, Queen of Scotland (1210–38) Louise, Princess Caroline Alberta (1848–1939) MacBeth, Lady see Gruoch, Queen of Scotland (fl. early/mid-11th century) Madeleine of France see Mary of Guise (1515–60) Margaret Logie, Queen of Scotland (c. 1330–c. 1373) Margaret of Denmark, Queen of Scotland (b. c. 1457, d. 1486) Margaret of England, Queen of Scotland see Joan of England (1210–38) Margaret of Scotland the younger see Margaret of Scotland (b. before 1195, buried 1259) Margaret of Scotland, Countess of Kent (b. before 1195, buried 1259) Margaret Rose, Princess see Snowdon, The Princess Margaret (1930–2002) Margaret Tudor, Queen of Scotland (1489–1541) Margaret, ‘Maid of Norway’, Queen-designate of Scots (b. c. 1282, d. 1290) Margaret, Saint, Queen of Scotland (b. c. 1046, d. 1093) Mary of Boulogne see Matilda of Scotland (c. 1080–c. 1118) Mary of Guelders, Queen of Scotland (b. c. 1433, d. 1463) Mary of Guise, Queen of Scotland (1515–60) Mary, Queen of Scots (1542–87) Matilda of Scotland (c. 1080–c. 1118) Maud de Senlis, Queen of Scotland (b. c. 1071, d. 1131) Osthryð (fl. AD 675–97) Raegnmaeld (fl. 650s) Ross, Euphemia, Countess of see Euphemia of Ross (b. c. 1329, d. 1388/9) Snowdon, The Princess Margaret (1930–2002) Stewart, Annabella see Stewart, Margaret (1424–45) Stewart, Eleanor see Stewart, Margaret (1424–45) Stewart, Elizabeth, Queen of Bohemia, Electress Palatine (1596–1662) Stewart, Isabella see Stewart, Margaret (1424–45) Stewart, Joanna see Stewart, Margaret (1424–45) Stewart, Margaret (1424–45) Stewart, Margaret (c. 1460–c. 1503)

492

Thematic Index

Stewart, Mary see Stewart, Margaret (1424–45) Stewart, Mary (b. before 1452, d. c. 1488) Tomnat (d. probably AD 695) Victoria (Alexandrina Victoria) (1819–1901) Science: (see named sciences) Sculpture Biggar, Helen (1909–53) Bone, Phyllis (1894–1972) Boyd, Mary (1910–97) Damer, Anne (1749–1828) Dempster, Elizabeth (1909–87) Grant, Mary (1831–1908) Hill, Amelia (1820–1904) Louise, Princess Caroline (1848–1939) McLaren, Ottilie see McLaren, Priscilla (1815–1906) Scott, Edith (1878–1947) Williams, Gertrude (1877–1934) Seafaring Buick, Mary (1777–1854) Drummond, Victoria (1894–1978) Fraser, Eliza (b. c. 1798, d. 1858) Hay, Jane (1864–1914) Miller, Elizabeth (1792–1864) Servants, household staff Bell (b. c. 1750) Cairns, Elizabeth (1685–1741) Campbell, Margaret (1766–86) Crawford, Marion (‘Crawfie’) (1909–88) Gessler, Pauline see Lyon, Jane (1771–1842) Highland Mary see Campbell, Margaret (1766–86) Lyon, Jane (1771–1842) McKinnon, Catherine see Lyon, Jane (1771–1842) Nichols, Sarah see Lyon, Jane (1771–1842) Stephen, Jessie (1893–1979) West, Elizabeth see Cairns, Elizabeth (1685–1741) Sexuality Argentocoxos, wife of (fl. c. 210–AD ) Arran, Elizabeth, Countess of see Stewart, Elizabeth (c. 1554–c. 1595) Barry, James (b. c. 1789, d. 1865) Burges, Margaret (b. c. 1579, d. 1629) Caddell, Christian see Caldwell, Christian (fl. 1660s) Caldwell (Caldall), Christian (fl. 1660s) Clapperton, Jane (1832–1914) Craigmyle, Elizabeth (Bessie) (1863–1933) Cumming, Jane (1795/6–1844) Dods, Mary (c. 1790–c. 1830) Douglas, Walter see Dods, Mary (c. 1790–c. 1830) Forbes-Sempill, Elizabeth (1912–91) Forster, Jacqueline (Jackie) (1926–98) Galt, Maud (fl. 1648/9) Gunn, Isabel (1781–1861)

Lyndsay, David see Dods, Mary (c. 1790–c. 1830) Paton, Fenella (1901–49) Pirie, Jane (1779–1833) Robinson, Isabella see Dods, Mary (c. 1790–c. 1830) Woods, Marianne see Pirie, Jane (1779–1833) Singers (see Music) Slavery: anti-slavery campaigners Nichol, Elizabeth (1807–97) Reid, Marion (1815–1902) Smeal, Jane see Wigham, Eliza (1820–99) Wigham, Eliza (1820–99) Wright, Frances (1795–1852) Slavery: slave owners Douglas, Cecilia (1772–1862) Mackenzie, Katherine (1773–1844) Slavery: slaves Balfour, Harriet (1818–58) Bell (b. c. 1750) Hendrick, Petronella see Balfour, Harriet (1818–58) Macdonald, Classinda see Balfour, Harriet (1818–58) Wells, Malvina (b. c. 1804, d. 1887) Social reform Adler, Ruth (1944–94) Arthur, Jane (1827–1907) Blackwood, Margaret (1924–94) Bryson, Agnes (b. c. 1831, d. 1907) Burton, Mary (1819–1909) Carnegie, Susan (1743–1821) Charteris, Catherine (1837–1918) Clark, Mary (c. 1740–c. 1815) Craig, Isa (1831–1903) Forrester-Paton, Catherine (1855–1914) Fraser, Janet (1883–1945) Garrett, Edward see Mayo, Isabella (1843–1914) Haldane, Elizabeth (1862–1937) Hannay, Jane (1868–1938) Jones, Beti (1919–2006) Ker, Alice (1853–1943) Macdonald, Clementina see Esslemont, Mary (1891–1984) McKay, Ailsa (1963–2014) Mckechnie, Sheila (1948–2004) Macpherson, Mary see Clark, Mary (c. 1740–c. 1815) Mayo, Isabella (1843–1914) Nichol, Elizabeth (1807–97) Sievwright, Margaret (1844–1905) Smeal, Jane see Wigham, Eliza (1820–99) Somerville, Euphemia (1860–1935) Thomson, Elizabeth (1847–1918) Walker, Mary (1863–1913) White, Mary see Bryson, Agnes (c. 1831–1907) Wigham, Eliza (1820–99)

493

Thematic Index

Social work Cavanagh, Catherine (1951–2008) Graham, Isabella (1742–1814) Jones, Beti (1919–2006) Lusk, Janet (1924–94) Macadam, Elizabeth (1871–1948) Macgregor, Margaret (c. 1838–1901) St Clair Erskine, Lady Millicent (1867–1955) Sutherland, Millicent, Duchess of see St Clair Erskine, Millicent (1867–1955) Urquhart, Margery (1912–2007) Society figures, hostesses Aberdeen and Temair, Ishbel, Marchioness of (Lady Aberdeen) (1857–1939) Asquith, Emma (Margot) (1864–1945) Baillie, Grisie see Baillie, Lady Grisell (1665–1746) Beaton, Mary see Maries, The Four (b. 16th century) Blaze de Bury, Marie (c. 1813–c. 1894) Cockburn, Alison (1713–94) Cranstoun, Jane see Stewart, Helen D’Arcy (1765–1838) Cunningham, Elizabeth, Countess of Glencairn (1724–1801) Dalrymple, Christian (1765–1838) Eglinton, Susanna, Countess of see Montgomerie, Susanna (1689/90–1780) Fleming, Mary see Maries, The Four (b. 16th century) Fletcher, Eliza (1770–1858) Fletcher, Elizabeth (1731–58) Gunning, Elizabeth, Duchess of Hamilton, Duchess of Argyll (1733–90) Hamilton, Margaret, Countess of Panmure (1668–1731) Herschel, Margaret Brodie (1810–84) Johnston, Sophia see Trotter, Menie (b. c. 1740, d. after 1828) Johnston, Sophia see Barnard, Lady Anne (1750–1825) Livingston, Mary see Maries, The Four (b. 16th century) McDougall, Lily (1875–1958) Maries, The Four (b. 16th century) Maxwell, Jane, Duchess of Gordon (b. c. 1749, d. 1812) Montgomerie, Susanna (1689/90–1780) Murray, Helen (b. c. 1708, d. 1777) Panmure, Margaret, Countess of see Hamilton, Margaret (1668–1731) Rutherford, Alison see Cockburn, Alison (1713–94) Seton, Mary see Maries, The Four (b. 16th century) St Clair Erskine, Lady Millicent (1867–1955) Stewart, Helen D’Arcy (1765–1838) Stirling Graham, Clementina (1782–1877)



Sutherland, Millicent, Duchess of see St Clair Erskine, Millicent (1867–1955) Trotter, Menie (b. c. 1740, d. after 1828) Sociology Cavanagh, Catherine (1951–2008) Innes, Susan (Sue) (1948–2005) Jarvie, Margaret (1928–2004) Larner, Christina (Kirsty) (1933–83) Spence, Catherine (1825–1910) Sport, leisure activities Adam Smith, Janet see Smith, Janet (1905–1999) Arran, Fiona, Countess of (1918–2013) Ballantine, Georgina (1889–1970) Baltacha, Elena (1983–2014) Barr, Isabel see Newstead, Isabel (1955–2007) Beddows, Charlotte (1887–1976) Brown, Mary (1900–83) Cameron, Una (1904–87) Campbell, Dorothy see Hurd, Dorothy (1883–1945) Fuchs, Eileen (1920–2013) Gilchrist, Mary (1882–1947) Gordon-McKay, Helen (1933–2014) Grainger, Agnes see Hurd, Dorothy (1883–1945) Greenlees, Allison (1896–1979) Gregory, Margaret see Gregory, Helen (1898–1946) Hamilton, Helen (1927–2013) Holm, Helen (1907–71) Hurd, Dorothy (1883–1945) Inglis Clark, Jane (c. 1859/60–1950) Jamieson, Hilda see Fuchs, Eileen (1920–2013) Jarvie, Margaret (1928–2004) Jeffrey, Mabel see Inglis Clark, Jane (c. 1859/60–1950) Keiller, Gabrielle (1908–95) King, Ellen (1909–1994) Neil, Annie (Andy) (1924–2004) Neil, Christina see Neil, Annie (1924–2004) Newstead, Isabel (1955–2007) Paterson-Brown, June (1932–2009) Riach, Nancy (1927–47) Shaw, Winnie (1947–92) Shepherd, Anna (Nan) (1893–1981) Smith, Janet (1905–99) Smith, Lucy see Inglis Clark, Jane (c. 1859/60–1950) Valentine, Jessie (1915–2006) Wood Allen, Jenny (1911–2010) Suffrage (see Politics and public life) Theatre (see Performing arts) Theology Althaus-Reid, Marcella (1952–2009) Duncan, Isabelle (1812–78) Templeton, Elizabeth (1945–2015)

494

Thematic Index

Trades Unions (see Politics and public life: labour movement and socialism) Traditional culture (see also Gaelic culture) Anderson, Margaret (c. 1834–1910) Broadwood, Lucy (1858–1929) Brown, Anna (1747–1810) Campbell, Dorothea (1793–1863) Fisher, Ray (1940–2011) Gilchrist, Anne (1863–1954) Gillespie, Margaret (1841–1913) Gowdie, Isobel (fl. 1662) Grant, Isabel (1887–1983) Grant, Katherine (1845–1928) Hadfield, Jean see MacDougall of MacDougall, Margaret (1913–98) Harris, Amelia (1815–91) Harris, Jane see Harris, Amelia (1815–91) Higgins, Lizzie see Robertson, Regina (1908–75) Hogg, Margaret see Laidlaw, Margaret (1730–1813) Jamieson, Christina (1864–1942) Johnson, Rachel see Barclay, Williamina (1883–1975) Johnston, Anne (1886–1963) Kennedy-Fraser, Marjory (1857–1930) Laidlaw, Margaret (1730–1813) Lyle, Agnes, of Kilbarchan (b. 1775, d. after 1825) MacAskill, Ishbel (1941–2011) MacDonald, Catherine see Campbell, Marion (1867–1970) MacDougall of MacDougall, Coline see MacDougall of MacDougall, Margaret (1913–98) MacDougall of MacDougall, Margaret (1913–98) Mackenzie, Joan (1929–2007) MacLachlan, Jessie (1866–1916) MacNeil, Flora (1928–2015) McNeill, Florence (1885–1973) Manson, Mary (1897–1994) Meg of Abernethy (fl. 1390s) Milligan, Jean (1886–1978) Montgomerie, Norah (1908–98) Munro, Ailie (1919–2002) Nan Eachainn Fhionnlaigh see MacKinnon, Nan (1902–82) Redpath, Jean (1937–2014) Robertson, Regina (Jeannie) (1908–75) Saxby, Jessie (1842–1940) Smith, Christina (1809–93) Stewart, Isabella (Belle) (1906–97) Stewart, Lucy (1901–82) Stewart, Sheila see Stewart, Isabella (Belle) (1906–97) Storie, Mary see Harris, Amelia (1815–91) Tolmie, Frances (1840–1926) Whyte, Betsy (1919–88)

Transgression: criminals, victims, other Alison, Isabel see McLachlan, Margaret (b. c. 1614) Arran, Elizabeth, Countess of see Stewart, Elizabeth (c. 1554–c. 1595) Baillie, Grisie see Baillie, Lady Grisell (1665–1746) Bell (b. c. 1750) Bollan, Angela (1977–96) Buchan, Isobel, Countess of see Fife, Isobel of (c. 1285–c. 1314) Burns, Margaret (c. 1769–c. 1792) Caddell, Christian see Caldwell, Christian (fl. 1660s) Caldwell (Caldall), Christian (fl. 1660s) Chiesley, Rachel, Lady Grange (d. 1745) Cumming, Jane (1795/6–1844) Cunningham, Lady Margaret (b. before 1598, d. 1623) Douglas, Alison (c. 1480–c. 1530) Douglas, Janet, Lady Glamis (b. c. 1504, d. 1537) Evota (Eve) of Stirling (fl. 1304) Finella (fl. c. 995) Forbes, Katherine (c. 1583–c. 1652) Glamis, Janet, Lady see Douglas, Janet (b. c. 1504, d. 1537) Gordon, Jean (b. 1670, d. 1746) Grahamslaw, Helen, of Newton (fl. c. 1570–c. 1600) Grange, Rachel, Lady see Chiesley, Rachel (d. 1745) Grant, Isobel (fl. 1637) Haliburton, Marion, Lady Home (c. 1500–c. 1563) Hartside, Margaret (fl. 1590s–1619) Harvey, Marion see McLachlan, Margaret (b. c. 1614) Hoppringle, Isabella (d. 1538) Hugone, Katherine (fl. 1598–1602) Jordan, Jessie (1887–1954) Ker, Dame Elizabeth (b. c. 1478, d. 1548) King, Jessie (1861–89) Leslie, Euphemia (b. c. 1508, d. 1570) Livingston, Jean (1579–1600) Log, Lucky (b. c. 1788) M’Dougal, Helen see Log, Lucky (b. c. 1788) MacCalzean, Euphame (d. 1591) Mackay, Margaret (b. c. 1722, d. 1814) Mackenzie, Barbara, of Kintail (c. 1595–c. 1630) McLachlan, Margaret (b. c. 1614) Mayne, Katherine see Rough, Alison (b. c. 1480, d. 1535) Menteith, Isabella, Countess of (fl. 1234–1260) Mortimer, Katherine see Margaret Logie (c. 1330–c. 1373) Newton, Janet, of Dalcove (fl. c. 1520–c. 1566) Pringle, Janet see Hoppringle, Isabella (d. 1538) Rothiemay, Katherine, Lady see Forbes, Katherine (c. 1583–c. 1652) Rough, Alison (b. c. 1480, d. 1535) Shaw, Christian, of Bargarran (b. 1686, d. after 1737) Smith, Madeleine Hamilton (1835–1928)

495

Thematic Index



Stewart, Elizabeth, Countess of Arran (c. 1554–c. 1595) Warriston, Jean, Lady see Livingston, Jean (1579–1600) Weir, Beatrix (fl. 1609) Weir, Jean (b. c. 1604, d. 1670) Travel, exploration Bird, Isabella Lucy (1831–1904) Christie, Isabella (1861–1949) Cobbold, Lady Evelyn (1867–1963) Cumming, Constance see Gordon-Cumming, Constance (1837–1924) Drinkwater, Winifred (1913–96) Fairfield, Cecily Isabel (1892–1983) Gibson, Margaret see Lewis, Agnes (1843–1920) Gordon-Cumming, Constance (1837–1924) Hargrave, Letitia (1813–54) Hendry, Janet see Drinkwater, Winifred (1913–96) Hotchkis, Anna (1885–1984) Hutchison, Isobel Wylie (1889–1982) Lewis, Agnes (1843–1920) Liston, Lady (1751–1828) Penny, Margaret (1812–91) Schaw, Janet (c. 1737–1801) West, Rebecca see Fairfield, Cecily (1892–1983) Voluntary service Bryans, Anne (1919–2004) Cowan, Minna (1878–1951) Fraser, Lady Marion (1932–2016) Paterson-Brown, June (1932–2009) Wise women, witchcraft Aitken, Margaret (d. c. 1597) Balfour, Alison (d. 1594) Bane (or Clerk), Margaret (b. before 1567, d. 1597) Boyman, Janet (b. before 1548, d. 1572) Burges, Margaret (b. c. 1579, d. 1629) Caddell, Christian see Caldwell, Christian (fl. 1660s)



Caldwell (Caldall), Christian (fl. 1660s) Duncan, (Victoria) Helen (1897–1956) Finnie, Agnes (d. 1645) Galt, Maud (fl. 1648/9) Gormla (Gormshuil Mhor) (fl. 17th century) Gowdie, Isobel (fl. 1662) Horne, Janet (d. 1722 or 1727) Jaffray, Grissel (d. 1669) Leslie, Beatrix (b. c. 1577, d. 1661) MacCalzean, Euphame (d. 1591) ‘Nicneven’ (or Nicnevin, Nicniven) (fl. 1560) Pearson, Alison (b. c. 1553, d. 1588) Reoch, Elspeth (d. 1616) Sampson, Agnes (d. 1591) Spaldarge, Janet see Bane, Margaret (b. before 1567, d. 1597) Weir, Jean (b. c. 1604, d. 1670) Wright, Bessie (fl. 1611–28) Young, Issobell (b. c. 1565, d. 1629) Women’s organisations (see also Politics and public life: women’s movement (other than suffrage), women’s rights) Blair, Catherine (1872–1946) Esslemont, Mary (1891–1984) Hannay, Jane (1868–1938) Hart, Jennifer (Maidie) (1916–97) Hepburn, Anne (1925–2016) Hutchison, Mary (1915–94) McLean, Agnes (1843–1940) Mair, Sarah Siddons (1846–1941) Malloch, Elizabeth (1910–2000) Maxwell, Alice (1856–1915) Skelton, Pamela (1938–2014) Soule, Caroline (1824–1903) Sutherland, Annie see Hutchison, Mary (1915–94) Sutherland, Mary (1895–1972) Williamson, Ella see Hutchison, Mary (1915–94) Writing (see Literature)

496